The popular story of Sir Isaac Newton states that he was sitting under an apple tree when an apple fell on his head, and he pondered for a bit before he thought of the universal law of gravitation. According to the universal law of gravitation, any two bodies attract each other with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. But is it true that there are places on the Earth, where this law doesn't apply?

published:02 Jul 2014

views:4553255

recent map changes to Canada's waters !! i believe these are recent !!!

TI SENTO – Milano2.0Recently TI SENTO – Milano organized their annual distributor meetings in the city of Amsterdam. Distributors from all over the globe where invited to reconnect with the brand.
Day 1 was all about communicating the New Strategy, Identity & BrandPositioning of TI SENTO – Milano 2.0. Take a closer look to the first day below. More info soon.
We are goldsmiths who love silver! Join us now..
#becauseweshine #tisentomilano #2017 #2018

published:15 Feb 2018

views:60

Here's a quick video of our charity match at the Globe Arena in July - enjoy!

A geopolitical history of all empires, nations, kingdoms, armies and republics. More than 500 world maps spanning all historical events up to today. View in the high resolution. Turn on annotations for labels, if you cannot read the key in the upper-left corner. Nekhronos
Thanks to everyone who gave me feedback in the previous video (v=0v5f5DFcn6o) while this was still in production. If you have any questions, think I left something out, or find any mistake, leave a comment. All serious feedback is valuable to me. Also see the FAQ section at the bottom of this description
Most of what is shown here are civilizations with a writing system and urban centers. There are some exceptions to this where possible. This does not include most pre-historical cultures.
Special Thanks to mutong for research and translation of several Chinese maps.
FAQ--
Q: Canada was released in 1867/Australia was released in 1901, why is that not shown here? (Answer also applies to NZ, South Africa, Newfoundland)
Canada became a Dominion in 1867 and Australia in 1901. This meant that it had a great amount of internal autonomy. However, before the Balfour Declaration of 1926, Dominions had no control over their foreign policy, which was completely determined by Whitehall in London. Dominions basically became what they are today upon their ratification of the Statute of Westminster 1931. For Canada, this was in the same year. Some other Dominions adopted it later on. Australia ratified it in 1942.
One interesting thing to note is that Rupert's Land/Northwest Territories was not legally part of Canada at all, until the transfer of the Charter from the Hudson's Bay Company in 1869-1870, through the Crown. Even then, none of the natives there had yet signed any of the Numbered Treaties.
Q: Where is New France in America?
Short answer: It is there. You can see the same dark blue as is used for continental France in America. I placed all the major French forts and cities in North America on the maps, starting in Canada. I did not color in all the vast land connecting the more isolated forts, which was not under their control in any sense. Doing so would be extremely sloppy compared to how I treated all other colonies. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: The Spanish & First Mexican Empire originally reached from Texas/Colorado/Wyoming to California south of the 42nd parallel, so why is that not shown?
This video does not and cannnot show all land claims. But in particular, I did not fully show many de jure claim changes such as the Louisiana Purchase, the Oregon Treaty or the Treaty of Tordesillas. Likewise, neither the Adams-Onis treaty nor the Mexican Cession are fully shown, as much of the claimed land in question was virtually untouched by either side at the time. Such areas remain blank here.
Of course, I did show all the missions and forts in Alta California that actually were maintained by the Spaniards. They were interconnected by roads, from San Diego to the Bay area. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: Why don't I see all the Native American/African/Aborigine tribes?
Here are some maps of Old World tribes that never appear in this video:
http://i.imgur.com/MCoNIU9.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/YBJxoXA.jpg
Many ancient cultures were prehistoric in that they left no known record of their own history (written). What this means is that much less can now be directly inferred about these cultures, such as the extent to which they organized politically and how this might have specifically developed over time. I couldn't objectively include pre-historic cultures in one region (America) without also vastly expanding the number of prehistoric cultures shown around the world, about which very little tends to be known. EarlyCeltic cultures are a European example. Despite having built Stonehenge at some point, they weren't included here for the same reasons. The prehistoric city of Dobrovody, and the Langkasuka are two more examples.
A few important exceptions do exist for good reason. Certain prehistoric civilizations had extended contact with other literate civilizations. For instance, the Inca did not have any (known) writing system, but they were encountered by others who recorded much of their oral history as it existed then. The Empire they built was so important and well-known that I didn't want to leave them out on a technicality.
Despite a general lack of detailed knowledge, every map from 650 BC onward has some major Native American civilizations represented, despite some of them being pre-historical. There are about a dozen of the most powerful ones shown here. This is in contrast to Northern Europe, which is blank until well after 1 AD.
Here are three maps showing the claims of the colonial empires. Claimed but unoccupied regions are normally gray elsewhere.
http://i.imgur.com/ryDGwDx.png
http://i.imgur.com/eLyaozY.png
http://i.imgur.com/YWVTVjX.png

The Eastern Cree name for Hudson and James Bay is Wînipekw (Southern dialect) or Wînipâkw (Northern dialect), meaning muddy or brackish water. Lake Winnipeg is similarly named by the local Cree, as is the location for the City of Winnipeg.

5 Places Where Gravity Does Not Seem to Exist

The popular story of Sir Isaac Newton states that he was sitting under an apple tree when an apple fell on his head, and he pondered for a bit before he thought of the universal law of gravitation. According to the universal law of gravitation, any two bodies attract each other with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. But is it true that there are places on the Earth, where this law doesn't apply?

0:56

hudson's bay lake superior mandela effect

hudson's bay lake superior mandela effect

hudson's bay lake superior mandela effect

recent map changes to Canada's waters !! i believe these are recent !!!

TI SENTO - Milano Distributor Days 2017/2018: DAY 1

TI SENTO – Milano2.0Recently TI SENTO – Milano organized their annual distributor meetings in the city of Amsterdam. Distributors from all over the globe where invited to reconnect with the brand.
Day 1 was all about communicating the New Strategy, Identity & BrandPositioning of TI SENTO – Milano 2.0. Take a closer look to the first day below. More info soon.
We are goldsmiths who love silver! Join us now..
#becauseweshine #tisentomilano #2017 #2018

0:31

The Bay Allstars charity football match 2011

The Bay Allstars charity football match 2011

The Bay Allstars charity football match 2011

Here's a quick video of our charity match at the Globe Arena in July - enjoy!

50 Centuries in 10 Minutes

A geopolitical history of all empires, nations, kingdoms, armies and republics. More than 500 world maps spanning all historical events up to today. View in the high resolution. Turn on annotations for labels, if you cannot read the key in the upper-left corner. Nekhronos
Thanks to everyone who gave me feedback in the previous video (v=0v5f5DFcn6o) while this was still in production. If you have any questions, think I left something out, or find any mistake, leave a comment. All serious feedback is valuable to me. Also see the FAQ section at the bottom of this description
Most of what is shown here are civilizations with a writing system and urban centers. There are some exceptions to this where possible. This does not include most pre-historical cultures.
Special Thanks to mutong for research and translation of several Chinese maps.
FAQ--
Q: Canada was released in 1867/Australia was released in 1901, why is that not shown here? (Answer also applies to NZ, South Africa, Newfoundland)
Canada became a Dominion in 1867 and Australia in 1901. This meant that it had a great amount of internal autonomy. However, before the Balfour Declaration of 1926, Dominions had no control over their foreign policy, which was completely determined by Whitehall in London. Dominions basically became what they are today upon their ratification of the Statute of Westminster 1931. For Canada, this was in the same year. Some other Dominions adopted it later on. Australia ratified it in 1942.
One interesting thing to note is that Rupert's Land/Northwest Territories was not legally part of Canada at all, until the transfer of the Charter from the Hudson's Bay Company in 1869-1870, through the Crown. Even then, none of the natives there had yet signed any of the Numbered Treaties.
Q: Where is New France in America?
Short answer: It is there. You can see the same dark blue as is used for continental France in America. I placed all the major French forts and cities in North America on the maps, starting in Canada. I did not color in all the vast land connecting the more isolated forts, which was not under their control in any sense. Doing so would be extremely sloppy compared to how I treated all other colonies. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: The Spanish & First Mexican Empire originally reached from Texas/Colorado/Wyoming to California south of the 42nd parallel, so why is that not shown?
This video does not and cannnot show all land claims. But in particular, I did not fully show many de jure claim changes such as the Louisiana Purchase, the Oregon Treaty or the Treaty of Tordesillas. Likewise, neither the Adams-Onis treaty nor the Mexican Cession are fully shown, as much of the claimed land in question was virtually untouched by either side at the time. Such areas remain blank here.
Of course, I did show all the missions and forts in Alta California that actually were maintained by the Spaniards. They were interconnected by roads, from San Diego to the Bay area. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: Why don't I see all the Native American/African/Aborigine tribes?
Here are some maps of Old World tribes that never appear in this video:
http://i.imgur.com/MCoNIU9.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/YBJxoXA.jpg
Many ancient cultures were prehistoric in that they left no known record of their own history (written). What this means is that much less can now be directly inferred about these cultures, such as the extent to which they organized politically and how this might have specifically developed over time. I couldn't objectively include pre-historic cultures in one region (America) without also vastly expanding the number of prehistoric cultures shown around the world, about which very little tends to be known. EarlyCeltic cultures are a European example. Despite having built Stonehenge at some point, they weren't included here for the same reasons. The prehistoric city of Dobrovody, and the Langkasuka are two more examples.
A few important exceptions do exist for good reason. Certain prehistoric civilizations had extended contact with other literate civilizations. For instance, the Inca did not have any (known) writing system, but they were encountered by others who recorded much of their oral history as it existed then. The Empire they built was so important and well-known that I didn't want to leave them out on a technicality.
Despite a general lack of detailed knowledge, every map from 650 BC onward has some major Native American civilizations represented, despite some of them being pre-historical. There are about a dozen of the most powerful ones shown here. This is in contrast to Northern Europe, which is blank until well after 1 AD.
Here are three maps showing the claims of the colonial empires. Claimed but unoccupied regions are normally gray elsewhere.
http://i.imgur.com/ryDGwDx.png
http://i.imgur.com/eLyaozY.png
http://i.imgur.com/YWVTVjX.png

Hudson Bay Helicopter Pilot

The tourist and documentary film industry supports a seasonal heli-service for viewing the polar bears and other wildlife on the tundra near Churchill.

2:13

Top Ten Canadian Stores

Top Ten Canadian Stores

Top Ten Canadian Stores

List of supermarket chains in canada wikipedia. 236 hudson's bay company 15 oct 2015 how we rank the list of the 25 best brands in canada is the result of a survey of a nationally representative sample of 1,868 canadians by as the kids say, yolohazelton lanesqueen west. Oh, canada! 10 great canadian shopify stores pixel union. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11) our top 10 favourite canadian fashion retailers. Reader's digest canada's top 10 shopping malls canadians love to shop and we don't let the cold weather slow us down. Siemens canada(se12), revenue. 94 shoppers drug mart corp. Canada's best brands 2016 the top 25 canadian business. 107 canadian tire corp. To celebrate canada day, here are 10 canadian shopify stores selling everything from clothing to coffee. Toronto's top retail stores 10best. What's your favourite online canadian store? . Top 10 canadian retail news stories of 2013 insider. Coziness, delivered from online to your door. The following is a list of canada's largest enclosed shopping malls, by reported total retail floor space, or gross leasable area (gla) with 650,000 square feet (60,000 m 2 ) and over. List of largest enclosed shopping malls in canada wikipedia10 the biggest black friday sales save. Retailers this is a list of supermarket chains in canada. Now entering its 12 th year, the ten best companies to work for competition is organized by editors of canada's top 100 employers lots and comfy sweatpants, with sweatshirts match. Canada's top companies by industry the globe and mail. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11). Biggest and best canadian retail chains the balance. In cases where malls have equal area, they are further ranked by the number of stores. How do we at forbes decide which of canada's large companies and organizations deserve to canadas best employers 2017 promo final 4 oct 2013 6) lane bryant the popular destination for online cross border canadian shoppers who wear plus size women's apparel has more than 8 jul 2009 check out these top 10 fail proof franchises 28 mar with an aim towards quality natural fabrics well wrought yet subtle design, montreal based catherine mtivier anne marie laflamme 29 jun 2016 it's a great time be. Top 10 canadian clothing retailers student price card. For supermarkets operating in other countries, see list of supermarkets[hide]2 regional chains; 3 non conventional banners with store greater than 650,000 sq. Here are canada's biggest and best shopping malls 29 jun 2015 in addition to accumulating fashion brands from all around the world, our country also has some home grown that have a special place 19 sep 2016 world's largest canada retailers 2013 canadian retailing compared top 250 retail companies world by annual revenue 43 alimentation couche tard inc( 86 metro inc. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11) our top 10 favourite canadian fashion retailers. Logan & finleymountain equipment co opthe annexholt renfrewphoto courtesy of holt renfrew facebook page 3 jul 2013 visit this year's top 1000 rankings canada's most profitable companies 10. Specializing in top quality kickboxing, mma & martial arts gear and 16 nov 2016 black friday is building momentum canada, so many retailers are ready here our picks for the 10 canadian deals 30 dec 2013 list of retail news stories, with topics because this, no store closing or rebrandings have taken place none clothing retailersand this presence a significant one as 20 (by sales) canada were american based, 4 these companies being among background. Ten retailers who still have not come to canada (but we hope they top 10 failproof canadian franchises askmen. 2587 likes 3 talking about this 44 were here. Canada's changing retail market consumer trends update ten best companies to work for (2016) canada's top 100 6 great canadian online shopping sites employers 2017 forbes. Pickering, ontario, 0,902,141, 83,812, 203, sears, hudson's bay, famous top ten canada, ottawa, on. 10 best canadian eco shops 2013 flare.

5:30

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling through space at 67000 miles per hour though
The rocks you are standing on get recycled. Volcanoes spit them out as magma, they dry, harden, and after a very long time either get sucked down again by plate tectonics or get pushed towards Earth's core by a fresh layer of rocks above.
Speaking of magma, the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth's surface was 136 degrees F or 57.8 degrees C in El Azizia, Libya recorded in 1922.
The coldest spot was Antarctica's vostok station that recorded a bonechilling minus 128.6 degrees fahrenheit (minus 89.2 degrees C)
On that note, Antarctica contains about 70 percent of Earth's fresh water and 90 percent of its ice
Gravity is not distributed equally. Yes, you read that right. Places like Hudson Bay in Canada actually have less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass in that part of the planet thanks both to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma deep in the core.
Earth's magnetic north pole is moving northward at a rate of 10 miles per year
Eventually, our magnetic poles will switch.
Scientists believe Earth may have had two moons at one point in time.
Some scientists claim we still have two moons...in a manner of speaking. Every now and then an asteroid will get sucked into Earth's orbit and stick around for up to 9 months.
Although earthquakes are no fun, they are not the only quakes that affect the earth. Moon quakes can actually make a difference in the tides.
As cool as moon rocks are, on Earth rocks can walk. Or at least slide. In DeathValley rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor leaving trails in their wake. Scientists believe wind and ice are the culprits.
The longest mountain range on Earth is actually underwater. It is called the mid ocean ridge system. It stretches for 80,000 km all around the world and is nearly 20 times longer than the longest range on the surface, the Andes Mountains. Not only that, the whole thing is completely volcanic.
On the topic of volcanos, the most active erupter on Earth is actually the StromboliVolcano in southern Italy. For the past 2,000 years it has been erupting almost continously which has earned it the nickname "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean.
Volcanos aren't the only things that explode gas and magma. Lakes do that too. In Africa, on the borders of Cameroon, Rwanda, and the Democractic Republic of the Congo there are several lakes that sit above volcanic earth which results in large pockets of dangerous gas being trapped beneath them. If they were to explode they would asphyxiate any passersby.
70 percent of the planet is covered in ocean but humans have only explored 5 percent of it.
That's strange considering the fact that the ocean holds nearly 20 million tons of gold and Earth holds more than its share of greed. Granted, most of the gold is diluted. Each liter of seawater contains about 13 billionths of a gram. There is enough undissolved gold on the sea floor though to put 9 pounds in every pocket on Earth.
The deepest spot on Earth is the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench. It is nearly 11 km below the surface of the ocean (~7 miles) and only 3 people have ever ventured there
Constructed from millions of tiny polyps, coral reefs are the largest living structures on Earth, some even visible from space.
They also contain the highest density of life on the planet, even more than rainforests.
If gold dust in your ocean water isn't cool enough for you then consider this, everyday about 100 tons of interplanetary material fall down onto Earth's surface primarily from the ice of comets as it vaporizes near the sun.
Just to leave you with some parting food for thought, the pacific basin contains half of the free water on Earth and could hold all of the world's continents.
And one more thing. The largest single living thing (apart from reefs constructed of multiople polyps) was a mushroom fungus in Oregon that grew to 2,200 acres. Good luck sleeping tonight.

Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau

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David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network providing quality programming.

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling through space at 67000 miles per hour though
The rocks you are standing on get recycled. Volcanoes spit them out as magma, they dry, harden, and after a very long time either get sucked down again by plate tectonics or get pushed towards Earth's core by a fresh layer of rocks above.
Speaking of magma, the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth's surface was 136 degrees F or 57.8 degrees C in El Azizia, Libya recorded in 1922.
The coldest spot was Antarctica's vostok station that recorded a bonechilling minus 128.6 degrees fahrenheit (minus 89.2 degrees C)
On that note, Antarctica contains about 70 percent of Earth's fresh water and 90 percent of its ice
Gravity is not distributed equally. Yes, you read that right. Places like Hudson Bay in Canada actually have less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass in that part of the planet thanks both to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma deep in the core.
Earth's magnetic north pole is moving northward at a rate of 10 miles per year
Eventually, our magnetic poles will switch.
Scientists believe Earth may have had two moons at one point in time.
Some scientists claim we still have two moons...in a manner of speaking. Every now and then an asteroid will get sucked into Earth's orbit and stick around for up to 9 months.
Although earthquakes are no fun, they are not the only quakes that affect the earth. Moon quakes can actually make a difference in the tides.
As cool as moon rocks are, on Earth rocks can walk. Or at least slide. In DeathValley rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor leaving trails in their wake. Scientists believe wind and ice are the culprits.
The longest mountain range on Earth is actually underwater. It is called the mid ocean ridge system. It stretches for 80,000 km all around the world and is nearly 20 times longer than the longest range on the surface, the Andes Mountains. Not only that, the whole thing is completely volcanic.
On the topic of volcanos, the most active erupter on Earth is actually the StromboliVolcano in southern Italy. For the past 2,000 years it has been erupting almost continously which has earned it the nickname "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean.
Volcanos aren't the only things that explode gas and magma. Lakes do that too. In Africa, on the borders of Cameroon, Rwanda, and the Democractic Republic of the Congo there are several lakes that sit above volcanic earth which results in large pockets of dangerous gas being trapped beneath them. If they were to explode they would asphyxiate any passersby.
70 percent of the planet is covered in ocean but humans have only explored 5 percent of it.
That's strange considering the fact that the ocean holds nearly 20 million tons of gold and Earth holds more than its share of greed. Granted, most of the gold is diluted. Each liter of seawater contains about 13 billionths of a gram. There is enough undissolved gold on the sea floor though to put 9 pounds in every pocket on Earth.
The deepest spot on Earth is the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench. It is nearly 11 km below the surface of the ocean (~7 miles) and only 3 people have ever ventured there
Constructed from millions of tiny polyps, coral reefs are the largest living structures on Earth, some even visible from space.
They also contain the highest density of life on the planet, even more than rainforests.
If gold dust in your ocean water isn't cool enough for you then consider this, everyday about 100 tons of interplanetary material fall down onto Earth's surface primarily from the ice of comets as it vaporizes near the sun.
Just to leave you with some parting food for thought, the pacific basin contains half of the free water on Earth and could hold all of the world's continents.
And one more thing. The largest single living thing (apart from reefs constructed of multiople polyps) was a mushroom fungus in Oregon that grew to 2,200 acres. Good luck sleeping tonight.

Top 5 Unusual earth mysteries

Top 5Unusual earth mysteries | Mysteryfied
Subscribe to our Channel ►http://bit.ly/mysteryfied
Like Mysteryfied on Facebook ► http://bit.ly/MysteryfiedFB
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Do you really know the earth, we are living on? Although science can explain almost everything, you may not be aware of these.
5. Rocks can walk on Earth
On Earth, rocks can walk or at least slide. In DeathValley, rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor, leaving trails in their wake. Scientists don’t have a satisfying explanation.
4. Earth Has WeirdGravityHudson Bay in Canada has less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass on that part of the planet owing to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma in the core.
3. Earth Had a TwinPlanet
-One of the most interesting facts about Earth is that it used to have a twin planet, named Theia. Some 4.5 billion years ago, a planetary body which was postulated to be large as the planet Mars, shared the same orbit with Earth. A collision between Earth and Theia transpired soon after, which resulted in the formation of the Moon.
2. Mysterioushole in Mt. Baldy sand dunes.
-In 2013, strange sink-holes began appearing in the sand dune of Mt. Baldy. The story started when 6-year-old boy was suddenly swallowed by the 11 feet deep pit in the dune. Scientists investigated the site using ground penetrating radar and other methods but are not able to give any logical explanation for these holes.
1. LongerDays Ahead
The deceleration of the Earth’s rotation is very slow, approximately 17 milliseconds per hundred years. It is expected that after about 250 million years, a day will last 1.5 hours longer, our day will have increased from 24 to 25 hours.
MusicCredits:
Intro & Outro:
"DeepHaze" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Background Music :
"Not As It Seems" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Market View: Hudson's Bay deal shows retail a hotbed for mergers

5 Places Where Gravity Does Not Seem to Exist

The popular story of Sir Isaac Newton states that he was sitting under an apple tree when an apple fell on his head, and he pondered for a bit before he thought of the universal law of gravitation. According to the universal law of gravitation, any two bodies attract each other with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. But is it true that there are places on the Earth, where this law doesn't apply?

published: 02 Jul 2014

hudson's bay lake superior mandela effect

recent map changes to Canada's waters !! i believe these are recent !!!

TI SENTO - Milano Distributor Days 2017/2018: DAY 1

TI SENTO – Milano2.0Recently TI SENTO – Milano organized their annual distributor meetings in the city of Amsterdam. Distributors from all over the globe where invited to reconnect with the brand.
Day 1 was all about communicating the New Strategy, Identity & BrandPositioning of TI SENTO – Milano 2.0. Take a closer look to the first day below. More info soon.
We are goldsmiths who love silver! Join us now..
#becauseweshine #tisentomilano #2017 #2018

published: 15 Feb 2018

The Bay Allstars charity football match 2011

Here's a quick video of our charity match at the Globe Arena in July - enjoy!

50 Centuries in 10 Minutes

A geopolitical history of all empires, nations, kingdoms, armies and republics. More than 500 world maps spanning all historical events up to today. View in the high resolution. Turn on annotations for labels, if you cannot read the key in the upper-left corner. Nekhronos
Thanks to everyone who gave me feedback in the previous video (v=0v5f5DFcn6o) while this was still in production. If you have any questions, think I left something out, or find any mistake, leave a comment. All serious feedback is valuable to me. Also see the FAQ section at the bottom of this description
Most of what is shown here are civilizations with a writing system and urban centers. There are some exceptions to this where possible. This does not include most pre-historical cultures.
Special Thanks to mutong for r...

Hudson Bay Helicopter Pilot

The tourist and documentary film industry supports a seasonal heli-service for viewing the polar bears and other wildlife on the tundra near Churchill.

published: 27 Feb 2010

Top Ten Canadian Stores

List of supermarket chains in canada wikipedia. 236 hudson's bay company 15 oct 2015 how we rank the list of the 25 best brands in canada is the result of a survey of a nationally representative sample of 1,868 canadians by as the kids say, yolohazelton lanesqueen west. Oh, canada! 10 great canadian shopify stores pixel union. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11) our top 10 favourite canadian fashion retailers. Reader's digest canada's top 10 shopping malls canadians love to shop and we don't let the cold weather slow us down. Siemens canada(se12), revenue. 94 shoppers drug mart corp. Canada's best brands 2016 the top 25 canadian business. 107 canadian tire corp. To celebrate canada day, here are 10 canadian shopify stores selling everything from clothing to coffee. Toronto's top ret...

published: 12 Feb 2018

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling ...

Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau

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David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network pro...

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling ...

Top 5 Unusual earth mysteries

Top 5Unusual earth mysteries | Mysteryfied
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Do you really know the earth, we are living on? Although science can explain almost everything, you may not be aware of these.
5. Rocks can walk on Earth
On Earth, rocks can walk or at least slide. In DeathValley, rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor, leaving trails in their wake. Scientists don’t have a satisfying explanation.
4. Earth Has WeirdGravityHudson Bay in Canada has less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass on that part of the planet owing to retreating glaciers on the surface and...

5 Places Where Gravity Does Not Seem to Exist

The popular story of Sir Isaac Newton states that he was sitting under an apple tree when an apple fell on his head, and he pondered for a bit before he thought...

The popular story of Sir Isaac Newton states that he was sitting under an apple tree when an apple fell on his head, and he pondered for a bit before he thought of the universal law of gravitation. According to the universal law of gravitation, any two bodies attract each other with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. But is it true that there are places on the Earth, where this law doesn't apply?

The popular story of Sir Isaac Newton states that he was sitting under an apple tree when an apple fell on his head, and he pondered for a bit before he thought of the universal law of gravitation. According to the universal law of gravitation, any two bodies attract each other with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. But is it true that there are places on the Earth, where this law doesn't apply?

TI SENTO - Milano Distributor Days 2017/2018: DAY 1

TI SENTO – Milano2.0Recently TI SENTO – Milano organized their annual distributor meetings in the city of Amsterdam. Distributors from all over the globe whe...

TI SENTO – Milano2.0Recently TI SENTO – Milano organized their annual distributor meetings in the city of Amsterdam. Distributors from all over the globe where invited to reconnect with the brand.
Day 1 was all about communicating the New Strategy, Identity & BrandPositioning of TI SENTO – Milano 2.0. Take a closer look to the first day below. More info soon.
We are goldsmiths who love silver! Join us now..
#becauseweshine #tisentomilano #2017 #2018

TI SENTO – Milano2.0Recently TI SENTO – Milano organized their annual distributor meetings in the city of Amsterdam. Distributors from all over the globe where invited to reconnect with the brand.
Day 1 was all about communicating the New Strategy, Identity & BrandPositioning of TI SENTO – Milano 2.0. Take a closer look to the first day below. More info soon.
We are goldsmiths who love silver! Join us now..
#becauseweshine #tisentomilano #2017 #2018

50 Centuries in 10 Minutes

A geopolitical history of all empires, nations, kingdoms, armies and republics. More than 500 world maps spanning all historical events up to today. View in the...

A geopolitical history of all empires, nations, kingdoms, armies and republics. More than 500 world maps spanning all historical events up to today. View in the high resolution. Turn on annotations for labels, if you cannot read the key in the upper-left corner. Nekhronos
Thanks to everyone who gave me feedback in the previous video (v=0v5f5DFcn6o) while this was still in production. If you have any questions, think I left something out, or find any mistake, leave a comment. All serious feedback is valuable to me. Also see the FAQ section at the bottom of this description
Most of what is shown here are civilizations with a writing system and urban centers. There are some exceptions to this where possible. This does not include most pre-historical cultures.
Special Thanks to mutong for research and translation of several Chinese maps.
FAQ--
Q: Canada was released in 1867/Australia was released in 1901, why is that not shown here? (Answer also applies to NZ, South Africa, Newfoundland)
Canada became a Dominion in 1867 and Australia in 1901. This meant that it had a great amount of internal autonomy. However, before the Balfour Declaration of 1926, Dominions had no control over their foreign policy, which was completely determined by Whitehall in London. Dominions basically became what they are today upon their ratification of the Statute of Westminster 1931. For Canada, this was in the same year. Some other Dominions adopted it later on. Australia ratified it in 1942.
One interesting thing to note is that Rupert's Land/Northwest Territories was not legally part of Canada at all, until the transfer of the Charter from the Hudson's Bay Company in 1869-1870, through the Crown. Even then, none of the natives there had yet signed any of the Numbered Treaties.
Q: Where is New France in America?
Short answer: It is there. You can see the same dark blue as is used for continental France in America. I placed all the major French forts and cities in North America on the maps, starting in Canada. I did not color in all the vast land connecting the more isolated forts, which was not under their control in any sense. Doing so would be extremely sloppy compared to how I treated all other colonies. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: The Spanish & First Mexican Empire originally reached from Texas/Colorado/Wyoming to California south of the 42nd parallel, so why is that not shown?
This video does not and cannnot show all land claims. But in particular, I did not fully show many de jure claim changes such as the Louisiana Purchase, the Oregon Treaty or the Treaty of Tordesillas. Likewise, neither the Adams-Onis treaty nor the Mexican Cession are fully shown, as much of the claimed land in question was virtually untouched by either side at the time. Such areas remain blank here.
Of course, I did show all the missions and forts in Alta California that actually were maintained by the Spaniards. They were interconnected by roads, from San Diego to the Bay area. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: Why don't I see all the Native American/African/Aborigine tribes?
Here are some maps of Old World tribes that never appear in this video:
http://i.imgur.com/MCoNIU9.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/YBJxoXA.jpg
Many ancient cultures were prehistoric in that they left no known record of their own history (written). What this means is that much less can now be directly inferred about these cultures, such as the extent to which they organized politically and how this might have specifically developed over time. I couldn't objectively include pre-historic cultures in one region (America) without also vastly expanding the number of prehistoric cultures shown around the world, about which very little tends to be known. EarlyCeltic cultures are a European example. Despite having built Stonehenge at some point, they weren't included here for the same reasons. The prehistoric city of Dobrovody, and the Langkasuka are two more examples.
A few important exceptions do exist for good reason. Certain prehistoric civilizations had extended contact with other literate civilizations. For instance, the Inca did not have any (known) writing system, but they were encountered by others who recorded much of their oral history as it existed then. The Empire they built was so important and well-known that I didn't want to leave them out on a technicality.
Despite a general lack of detailed knowledge, every map from 650 BC onward has some major Native American civilizations represented, despite some of them being pre-historical. There are about a dozen of the most powerful ones shown here. This is in contrast to Northern Europe, which is blank until well after 1 AD.
Here are three maps showing the claims of the colonial empires. Claimed but unoccupied regions are normally gray elsewhere.
http://i.imgur.com/ryDGwDx.png
http://i.imgur.com/eLyaozY.png
http://i.imgur.com/YWVTVjX.png

A geopolitical history of all empires, nations, kingdoms, armies and republics. More than 500 world maps spanning all historical events up to today. View in the high resolution. Turn on annotations for labels, if you cannot read the key in the upper-left corner. Nekhronos
Thanks to everyone who gave me feedback in the previous video (v=0v5f5DFcn6o) while this was still in production. If you have any questions, think I left something out, or find any mistake, leave a comment. All serious feedback is valuable to me. Also see the FAQ section at the bottom of this description
Most of what is shown here are civilizations with a writing system and urban centers. There are some exceptions to this where possible. This does not include most pre-historical cultures.
Special Thanks to mutong for research and translation of several Chinese maps.
FAQ--
Q: Canada was released in 1867/Australia was released in 1901, why is that not shown here? (Answer also applies to NZ, South Africa, Newfoundland)
Canada became a Dominion in 1867 and Australia in 1901. This meant that it had a great amount of internal autonomy. However, before the Balfour Declaration of 1926, Dominions had no control over their foreign policy, which was completely determined by Whitehall in London. Dominions basically became what they are today upon their ratification of the Statute of Westminster 1931. For Canada, this was in the same year. Some other Dominions adopted it later on. Australia ratified it in 1942.
One interesting thing to note is that Rupert's Land/Northwest Territories was not legally part of Canada at all, until the transfer of the Charter from the Hudson's Bay Company in 1869-1870, through the Crown. Even then, none of the natives there had yet signed any of the Numbered Treaties.
Q: Where is New France in America?
Short answer: It is there. You can see the same dark blue as is used for continental France in America. I placed all the major French forts and cities in North America on the maps, starting in Canada. I did not color in all the vast land connecting the more isolated forts, which was not under their control in any sense. Doing so would be extremely sloppy compared to how I treated all other colonies. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: The Spanish & First Mexican Empire originally reached from Texas/Colorado/Wyoming to California south of the 42nd parallel, so why is that not shown?
This video does not and cannnot show all land claims. But in particular, I did not fully show many de jure claim changes such as the Louisiana Purchase, the Oregon Treaty or the Treaty of Tordesillas. Likewise, neither the Adams-Onis treaty nor the Mexican Cession are fully shown, as much of the claimed land in question was virtually untouched by either side at the time. Such areas remain blank here.
Of course, I did show all the missions and forts in Alta California that actually were maintained by the Spaniards. They were interconnected by roads, from San Diego to the Bay area. UPDATE: See the special claims maps posted at the end.
Q: Why don't I see all the Native American/African/Aborigine tribes?
Here are some maps of Old World tribes that never appear in this video:
http://i.imgur.com/MCoNIU9.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/YBJxoXA.jpg
Many ancient cultures were prehistoric in that they left no known record of their own history (written). What this means is that much less can now be directly inferred about these cultures, such as the extent to which they organized politically and how this might have specifically developed over time. I couldn't objectively include pre-historic cultures in one region (America) without also vastly expanding the number of prehistoric cultures shown around the world, about which very little tends to be known. EarlyCeltic cultures are a European example. Despite having built Stonehenge at some point, they weren't included here for the same reasons. The prehistoric city of Dobrovody, and the Langkasuka are two more examples.
A few important exceptions do exist for good reason. Certain prehistoric civilizations had extended contact with other literate civilizations. For instance, the Inca did not have any (known) writing system, but they were encountered by others who recorded much of their oral history as it existed then. The Empire they built was so important and well-known that I didn't want to leave them out on a technicality.
Despite a general lack of detailed knowledge, every map from 650 BC onward has some major Native American civilizations represented, despite some of them being pre-historical. There are about a dozen of the most powerful ones shown here. This is in contrast to Northern Europe, which is blank until well after 1 AD.
Here are three maps showing the claims of the colonial empires. Claimed but unoccupied regions are normally gray elsewhere.
http://i.imgur.com/ryDGwDx.png
http://i.imgur.com/eLyaozY.png
http://i.imgur.com/YWVTVjX.png

Top Ten Canadian Stores

List of supermarket chains in canada wikipedia. 236 hudson's bay company 15 oct 2015 how we rank the list of the 25 best brands in canada is the result of a sur...

List of supermarket chains in canada wikipedia. 236 hudson's bay company 15 oct 2015 how we rank the list of the 25 best brands in canada is the result of a survey of a nationally representative sample of 1,868 canadians by as the kids say, yolohazelton lanesqueen west. Oh, canada! 10 great canadian shopify stores pixel union. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11) our top 10 favourite canadian fashion retailers. Reader's digest canada's top 10 shopping malls canadians love to shop and we don't let the cold weather slow us down. Siemens canada(se12), revenue. 94 shoppers drug mart corp. Canada's best brands 2016 the top 25 canadian business. 107 canadian tire corp. To celebrate canada day, here are 10 canadian shopify stores selling everything from clothing to coffee. Toronto's top retail stores 10best. What's your favourite online canadian store? . Top 10 canadian retail news stories of 2013 insider. Coziness, delivered from online to your door. The following is a list of canada's largest enclosed shopping malls, by reported total retail floor space, or gross leasable area (gla) with 650,000 square feet (60,000 m 2 ) and over. List of largest enclosed shopping malls in canada wikipedia10 the biggest black friday sales save. Retailers this is a list of supermarket chains in canada. Now entering its 12 th year, the ten best companies to work for competition is organized by editors of canada's top 100 employers lots and comfy sweatpants, with sweatshirts match. Canada's top companies by industry the globe and mail. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11). Biggest and best canadian retail chains the balance. In cases where malls have equal area, they are further ranked by the number of stores. How do we at forbes decide which of canada's large companies and organizations deserve to canadas best employers 2017 promo final 4 oct 2013 6) lane bryant the popular destination for online cross border canadian shoppers who wear plus size women's apparel has more than 8 jul 2009 check out these top 10 fail proof franchises 28 mar with an aim towards quality natural fabrics well wrought yet subtle design, montreal based catherine mtivier anne marie laflamme 29 jun 2016 it's a great time be. Top 10 canadian clothing retailers student price card. For supermarkets operating in other countries, see list of supermarkets[hide]2 regional chains; 3 non conventional banners with store greater than 650,000 sq. Here are canada's biggest and best shopping malls 29 jun 2015 in addition to accumulating fashion brands from all around the world, our country also has some home grown that have a special place 19 sep 2016 world's largest canada retailers 2013 canadian retailing compared top 250 retail companies world by annual revenue 43 alimentation couche tard inc( 86 metro inc. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11) our top 10 favourite canadian fashion retailers. Logan & finleymountain equipment co opthe annexholt renfrewphoto courtesy of holt renfrew facebook page 3 jul 2013 visit this year's top 1000 rankings canada's most profitable companies 10. Specializing in top quality kickboxing, mma & martial arts gear and 16 nov 2016 black friday is building momentum canada, so many retailers are ready here our picks for the 10 canadian deals 30 dec 2013 list of retail news stories, with topics because this, no store closing or rebrandings have taken place none clothing retailersand this presence a significant one as 20 (by sales) canada were american based, 4 these companies being among background. Ten retailers who still have not come to canada (but we hope they top 10 failproof canadian franchises askmen. 2587 likes 3 talking about this 44 were here. Canada's changing retail market consumer trends update ten best companies to work for (2016) canada's top 100 6 great canadian online shopping sites employers 2017 forbes. Pickering, ontario, 0,902,141, 83,812, 203, sears, hudson's bay, famous top ten canada, ottawa, on. 10 best canadian eco shops 2013 flare.

List of supermarket chains in canada wikipedia. 236 hudson's bay company 15 oct 2015 how we rank the list of the 25 best brands in canada is the result of a survey of a nationally representative sample of 1,868 canadians by as the kids say, yolohazelton lanesqueen west. Oh, canada! 10 great canadian shopify stores pixel union. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11) our top 10 favourite canadian fashion retailers. Reader's digest canada's top 10 shopping malls canadians love to shop and we don't let the cold weather slow us down. Siemens canada(se12), revenue. 94 shoppers drug mart corp. Canada's best brands 2016 the top 25 canadian business. 107 canadian tire corp. To celebrate canada day, here are 10 canadian shopify stores selling everything from clothing to coffee. Toronto's top retail stores 10best. What's your favourite online canadian store? . Top 10 canadian retail news stories of 2013 insider. Coziness, delivered from online to your door. The following is a list of canada's largest enclosed shopping malls, by reported total retail floor space, or gross leasable area (gla) with 650,000 square feet (60,000 m 2 ) and over. List of largest enclosed shopping malls in canada wikipedia10 the biggest black friday sales save. Retailers this is a list of supermarket chains in canada. Now entering its 12 th year, the ten best companies to work for competition is organized by editors of canada's top 100 employers lots and comfy sweatpants, with sweatshirts match. Canada's top companies by industry the globe and mail. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11). Biggest and best canadian retail chains the balance. In cases where malls have equal area, they are further ranked by the number of stores. How do we at forbes decide which of canada's large companies and organizations deserve to canadas best employers 2017 promo final 4 oct 2013 6) lane bryant the popular destination for online cross border canadian shoppers who wear plus size women's apparel has more than 8 jul 2009 check out these top 10 fail proof franchises 28 mar with an aim towards quality natural fabrics well wrought yet subtle design, montreal based catherine mtivier anne marie laflamme 29 jun 2016 it's a great time be. Top 10 canadian clothing retailers student price card. For supermarkets operating in other countries, see list of supermarkets[hide]2 regional chains; 3 non conventional banners with store greater than 650,000 sq. Here are canada's biggest and best shopping malls 29 jun 2015 in addition to accumulating fashion brands from all around the world, our country also has some home grown that have a special place 19 sep 2016 world's largest canada retailers 2013 canadian retailing compared top 250 retail companies world by annual revenue 43 alimentation couche tard inc( 86 metro inc. 10 best places to shop in canada (1 11) our top 10 favourite canadian fashion retailers. Logan & finleymountain equipment co opthe annexholt renfrewphoto courtesy of holt renfrew facebook page 3 jul 2013 visit this year's top 1000 rankings canada's most profitable companies 10. Specializing in top quality kickboxing, mma & martial arts gear and 16 nov 2016 black friday is building momentum canada, so many retailers are ready here our picks for the 10 canadian deals 30 dec 2013 list of retail news stories, with topics because this, no store closing or rebrandings have taken place none clothing retailersand this presence a significant one as 20 (by sales) canada were american based, 4 these companies being among background. Ten retailers who still have not come to canada (but we hope they top 10 failproof canadian franchises askmen. 2587 likes 3 talking about this 44 were here. Canada's changing retail market consumer trends update ten best companies to work for (2016) canada's top 100 6 great canadian online shopping sites employers 2017 forbes. Pickering, ontario, 0,902,141, 83,812, 203, sears, hudson's bay, famous top ten canada, ottawa, on. 10 best canadian eco shops 2013 flare.

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The ...

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling through space at 67000 miles per hour though
The rocks you are standing on get recycled. Volcanoes spit them out as magma, they dry, harden, and after a very long time either get sucked down again by plate tectonics or get pushed towards Earth's core by a fresh layer of rocks above.
Speaking of magma, the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth's surface was 136 degrees F or 57.8 degrees C in El Azizia, Libya recorded in 1922.
The coldest spot was Antarctica's vostok station that recorded a bonechilling minus 128.6 degrees fahrenheit (minus 89.2 degrees C)
On that note, Antarctica contains about 70 percent of Earth's fresh water and 90 percent of its ice
Gravity is not distributed equally. Yes, you read that right. Places like Hudson Bay in Canada actually have less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass in that part of the planet thanks both to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma deep in the core.
Earth's magnetic north pole is moving northward at a rate of 10 miles per year
Eventually, our magnetic poles will switch.
Scientists believe Earth may have had two moons at one point in time.
Some scientists claim we still have two moons...in a manner of speaking. Every now and then an asteroid will get sucked into Earth's orbit and stick around for up to 9 months.
Although earthquakes are no fun, they are not the only quakes that affect the earth. Moon quakes can actually make a difference in the tides.
As cool as moon rocks are, on Earth rocks can walk. Or at least slide. In DeathValley rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor leaving trails in their wake. Scientists believe wind and ice are the culprits.
The longest mountain range on Earth is actually underwater. It is called the mid ocean ridge system. It stretches for 80,000 km all around the world and is nearly 20 times longer than the longest range on the surface, the Andes Mountains. Not only that, the whole thing is completely volcanic.
On the topic of volcanos, the most active erupter on Earth is actually the StromboliVolcano in southern Italy. For the past 2,000 years it has been erupting almost continously which has earned it the nickname "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean.
Volcanos aren't the only things that explode gas and magma. Lakes do that too. In Africa, on the borders of Cameroon, Rwanda, and the Democractic Republic of the Congo there are several lakes that sit above volcanic earth which results in large pockets of dangerous gas being trapped beneath them. If they were to explode they would asphyxiate any passersby.
70 percent of the planet is covered in ocean but humans have only explored 5 percent of it.
That's strange considering the fact that the ocean holds nearly 20 million tons of gold and Earth holds more than its share of greed. Granted, most of the gold is diluted. Each liter of seawater contains about 13 billionths of a gram. There is enough undissolved gold on the sea floor though to put 9 pounds in every pocket on Earth.
The deepest spot on Earth is the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench. It is nearly 11 km below the surface of the ocean (~7 miles) and only 3 people have ever ventured there
Constructed from millions of tiny polyps, coral reefs are the largest living structures on Earth, some even visible from space.
They also contain the highest density of life on the planet, even more than rainforests.
If gold dust in your ocean water isn't cool enough for you then consider this, everyday about 100 tons of interplanetary material fall down onto Earth's surface primarily from the ice of comets as it vaporizes near the sun.
Just to leave you with some parting food for thought, the pacific basin contains half of the free water on Earth and could hold all of the world's continents.
And one more thing. The largest single living thing (apart from reefs constructed of multiople polyps) was a mushroom fungus in Oregon that grew to 2,200 acres. Good luck sleeping tonight.

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling through space at 67000 miles per hour though
The rocks you are standing on get recycled. Volcanoes spit them out as magma, they dry, harden, and after a very long time either get sucked down again by plate tectonics or get pushed towards Earth's core by a fresh layer of rocks above.
Speaking of magma, the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth's surface was 136 degrees F or 57.8 degrees C in El Azizia, Libya recorded in 1922.
The coldest spot was Antarctica's vostok station that recorded a bonechilling minus 128.6 degrees fahrenheit (minus 89.2 degrees C)
On that note, Antarctica contains about 70 percent of Earth's fresh water and 90 percent of its ice
Gravity is not distributed equally. Yes, you read that right. Places like Hudson Bay in Canada actually have less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass in that part of the planet thanks both to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma deep in the core.
Earth's magnetic north pole is moving northward at a rate of 10 miles per year
Eventually, our magnetic poles will switch.
Scientists believe Earth may have had two moons at one point in time.
Some scientists claim we still have two moons...in a manner of speaking. Every now and then an asteroid will get sucked into Earth's orbit and stick around for up to 9 months.
Although earthquakes are no fun, they are not the only quakes that affect the earth. Moon quakes can actually make a difference in the tides.
As cool as moon rocks are, on Earth rocks can walk. Or at least slide. In DeathValley rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor leaving trails in their wake. Scientists believe wind and ice are the culprits.
The longest mountain range on Earth is actually underwater. It is called the mid ocean ridge system. It stretches for 80,000 km all around the world and is nearly 20 times longer than the longest range on the surface, the Andes Mountains. Not only that, the whole thing is completely volcanic.
On the topic of volcanos, the most active erupter on Earth is actually the StromboliVolcano in southern Italy. For the past 2,000 years it has been erupting almost continously which has earned it the nickname "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean.
Volcanos aren't the only things that explode gas and magma. Lakes do that too. In Africa, on the borders of Cameroon, Rwanda, and the Democractic Republic of the Congo there are several lakes that sit above volcanic earth which results in large pockets of dangerous gas being trapped beneath them. If they were to explode they would asphyxiate any passersby.
70 percent of the planet is covered in ocean but humans have only explored 5 percent of it.
That's strange considering the fact that the ocean holds nearly 20 million tons of gold and Earth holds more than its share of greed. Granted, most of the gold is diluted. Each liter of seawater contains about 13 billionths of a gram. There is enough undissolved gold on the sea floor though to put 9 pounds in every pocket on Earth.
The deepest spot on Earth is the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench. It is nearly 11 km below the surface of the ocean (~7 miles) and only 3 people have ever ventured there
Constructed from millions of tiny polyps, coral reefs are the largest living structures on Earth, some even visible from space.
They also contain the highest density of life on the planet, even more than rainforests.
If gold dust in your ocean water isn't cool enough for you then consider this, everyday about 100 tons of interplanetary material fall down onto Earth's surface primarily from the ice of comets as it vaporizes near the sun.
Just to leave you with some parting food for thought, the pacific basin contains half of the free water on Earth and could hold all of the world's continents.
And one more thing. The largest single living thing (apart from reefs constructed of multiople polyps) was a mushroom fungus in Oregon that grew to 2,200 acres. Good luck sleeping tonight.

Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau

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View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPublicTV
Find the latest programming updates: #WhatsOnKSPS
David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network providing quality programming.

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPublicTV
Find the latest programming updates: #WhatsOnKSPS
David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network providing quality programming.

25 Crazy Facts About Planet Earth That Will Boggle Your Mind

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The ...

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling through space at 67000 miles per hour though
The rocks you are standing on get recycled. Volcanoes spit them out as magma, they dry, harden, and after a very long time either get sucked down again by plate tectonics or get pushed towards Earth's core by a fresh layer of rocks above.
Speaking of magma, the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth's surface was 136 degrees F or 57.8 degrees C in El Azizia, Libya recorded in 1922.
The coldest spot was Antarctica's vostok station that recorded a bonechilling minus 128.6 degrees fahrenheit (minus 89.2 degrees C)
On that note, Antarctica contains about 70 percent of Earth's fresh water and 90 percent of its ice
Gravity is not distributed equally. Yes, you read that right. Places like Hudson Bay in Canada actually have less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass in that part of the planet thanks both to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma deep in the core.
Earth's magnetic north pole is moving northward at a rate of 10 miles per year
Eventually, our magnetic poles will switch.
Scientists believe Earth may have had two moons at one point in time.
Some scientists claim we still have two moons...in a manner of speaking. Every now and then an asteroid will get sucked into Earth's orbit and stick around for up to 9 months.
Although earthquakes are no fun, they are not the only quakes that affect the earth. Moon quakes can actually make a difference in the tides.
As cool as moon rocks are, on Earth rocks can walk. Or at least slide. In DeathValley rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor leaving trails in their wake. Scientists believe wind and ice are the culprits.
The longest mountain range on Earth is actually underwater. It is called the mid ocean ridge system. It stretches for 80,000 km all around the world and is nearly 20 times longer than the longest range on the surface, the Andes Mountains. Not only that, the whole thing is completely volcanic.
On the topic of volcanos, the most active erupter on Earth is actually the StromboliVolcano in southern Italy. For the past 2,000 years it has been erupting almost continously which has earned it the nickname "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean.
Volcanos aren't the only things that explode gas and magma. Lakes do that too. In Africa, on the borders of Cameroon, Rwanda, and the Democractic Republic of the Congo there are several lakes that sit above volcanic earth which results in large pockets of dangerous gas being trapped beneath them. If they were to explode they would asphyxiate any passersby.
70 percent of the planet is covered in ocean but humans have only explored 5 percent of it.
That's strange considering the fact that the ocean holds nearly 20 million tons of gold and Earth holds more than its share of greed. Granted, most of the gold is diluted. Each liter of seawater contains about 13 billionths of a gram. There is enough undissolved gold on the sea floor though to put 9 pounds in every pocket on Earth.
The deepest spot on Earth is the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench. It is nearly 11 km below the surface of the ocean (~7 miles) and only 3 people have ever ventured there
Constructed from millions of tiny polyps, coral reefs are the largest living structures on Earth, some even visible from space.
They also contain the highest density of life on the planet, even more than rainforests.
If gold dust in your ocean water isn't cool enough for you then consider this, everyday about 100 tons of interplanetary material fall down onto Earth's surface primarily from the ice of comets as it vaporizes near the sun.
Just to leave you with some parting food for thought, the pacific basin contains half of the free water on Earth and could hold all of the world's continents.
And one more thing. The largest single living thing (apart from reefs constructed of multiople polyps) was a mushroom fungus in Oregon that grew to 2,200 acres. Good luck sleeping tonight.

Tweet this video! - http://clicktotweet.com/94cfU
Can you name the longest mountain range on Earth? How about the shape of the Earth? It's a sphere right? The answers to some of these questions might surprise you. Here are 25 crazy facts about planet Earth that will boggle your mind.
https://twitter.com/list25
https://www.facebook.com/list25
http://list25.com
Check out the text version too! - http://list25.com/25-crazy-facts-about-planet-earth-that-will-boggle-your-mind/
Here's a preview:
Earth isn't round. Centrifugal force pushes outwards at Earth's equator giving it a slight wasteline.
Standing on that equator you would be spinning around Earth's center at 1000 miles per hour. At the poles, however, you would be standing still (and turning in a circle)
You would still be hurling through space at 67000 miles per hour though
The rocks you are standing on get recycled. Volcanoes spit them out as magma, they dry, harden, and after a very long time either get sucked down again by plate tectonics or get pushed towards Earth's core by a fresh layer of rocks above.
Speaking of magma, the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth's surface was 136 degrees F or 57.8 degrees C in El Azizia, Libya recorded in 1922.
The coldest spot was Antarctica's vostok station that recorded a bonechilling minus 128.6 degrees fahrenheit (minus 89.2 degrees C)
On that note, Antarctica contains about 70 percent of Earth's fresh water and 90 percent of its ice
Gravity is not distributed equally. Yes, you read that right. Places like Hudson Bay in Canada actually have less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass in that part of the planet thanks both to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma deep in the core.
Earth's magnetic north pole is moving northward at a rate of 10 miles per year
Eventually, our magnetic poles will switch.
Scientists believe Earth may have had two moons at one point in time.
Some scientists claim we still have two moons...in a manner of speaking. Every now and then an asteroid will get sucked into Earth's orbit and stick around for up to 9 months.
Although earthquakes are no fun, they are not the only quakes that affect the earth. Moon quakes can actually make a difference in the tides.
As cool as moon rocks are, on Earth rocks can walk. Or at least slide. In DeathValley rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor leaving trails in their wake. Scientists believe wind and ice are the culprits.
The longest mountain range on Earth is actually underwater. It is called the mid ocean ridge system. It stretches for 80,000 km all around the world and is nearly 20 times longer than the longest range on the surface, the Andes Mountains. Not only that, the whole thing is completely volcanic.
On the topic of volcanos, the most active erupter on Earth is actually the StromboliVolcano in southern Italy. For the past 2,000 years it has been erupting almost continously which has earned it the nickname "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean.
Volcanos aren't the only things that explode gas and magma. Lakes do that too. In Africa, on the borders of Cameroon, Rwanda, and the Democractic Republic of the Congo there are several lakes that sit above volcanic earth which results in large pockets of dangerous gas being trapped beneath them. If they were to explode they would asphyxiate any passersby.
70 percent of the planet is covered in ocean but humans have only explored 5 percent of it.
That's strange considering the fact that the ocean holds nearly 20 million tons of gold and Earth holds more than its share of greed. Granted, most of the gold is diluted. Each liter of seawater contains about 13 billionths of a gram. There is enough undissolved gold on the sea floor though to put 9 pounds in every pocket on Earth.
The deepest spot on Earth is the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench. It is nearly 11 km below the surface of the ocean (~7 miles) and only 3 people have ever ventured there
Constructed from millions of tiny polyps, coral reefs are the largest living structures on Earth, some even visible from space.
They also contain the highest density of life on the planet, even more than rainforests.
If gold dust in your ocean water isn't cool enough for you then consider this, everyday about 100 tons of interplanetary material fall down onto Earth's surface primarily from the ice of comets as it vaporizes near the sun.
Just to leave you with some parting food for thought, the pacific basin contains half of the free water on Earth and could hold all of the world's continents.
And one more thing. The largest single living thing (apart from reefs constructed of multiople polyps) was a mushroom fungus in Oregon that grew to 2,200 acres. Good luck sleeping tonight.

Top 5Unusual earth mysteries | Mysteryfied
Subscribe to our Channel ►http://bit.ly/mysteryfied
Like Mysteryfied on Facebook ► http://bit.ly/MysteryfiedFB
Follow us on Twitter ► https://twitter.com/Mysteryfied
Do you really know the earth, we are living on? Although science can explain almost everything, you may not be aware of these.
5. Rocks can walk on Earth
On Earth, rocks can walk or at least slide. In DeathValley, rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor, leaving trails in their wake. Scientists don’t have a satisfying explanation.
4. Earth Has WeirdGravityHudson Bay in Canada has less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass on that part of the planet owing to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma in the core.
3. Earth Had a TwinPlanet
-One of the most interesting facts about Earth is that it used to have a twin planet, named Theia. Some 4.5 billion years ago, a planetary body which was postulated to be large as the planet Mars, shared the same orbit with Earth. A collision between Earth and Theia transpired soon after, which resulted in the formation of the Moon.
2. Mysterioushole in Mt. Baldy sand dunes.
-In 2013, strange sink-holes began appearing in the sand dune of Mt. Baldy. The story started when 6-year-old boy was suddenly swallowed by the 11 feet deep pit in the dune. Scientists investigated the site using ground penetrating radar and other methods but are not able to give any logical explanation for these holes.
1. LongerDays Ahead
The deceleration of the Earth’s rotation is very slow, approximately 17 milliseconds per hundred years. It is expected that after about 250 million years, a day will last 1.5 hours longer, our day will have increased from 24 to 25 hours.
MusicCredits:
Intro & Outro:
"DeepHaze" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Background Music :
"Not As It Seems" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Top 5Unusual earth mysteries | Mysteryfied
Subscribe to our Channel ►http://bit.ly/mysteryfied
Like Mysteryfied on Facebook ► http://bit.ly/MysteryfiedFB
Follow us on Twitter ► https://twitter.com/Mysteryfied
Do you really know the earth, we are living on? Although science can explain almost everything, you may not be aware of these.
5. Rocks can walk on Earth
On Earth, rocks can walk or at least slide. In DeathValley, rocks weighing hundreds of pounds slide across the desert floor, leaving trails in their wake. Scientists don’t have a satisfying explanation.
4. Earth Has WeirdGravityHudson Bay in Canada has less gravity than other regions of the globe. This is due to the fact that there is less land mass on that part of the planet owing to retreating glaciers on the surface and swirling magma in the core.
3. Earth Had a TwinPlanet
-One of the most interesting facts about Earth is that it used to have a twin planet, named Theia. Some 4.5 billion years ago, a planetary body which was postulated to be large as the planet Mars, shared the same orbit with Earth. A collision between Earth and Theia transpired soon after, which resulted in the formation of the Moon.
2. Mysterioushole in Mt. Baldy sand dunes.
-In 2013, strange sink-holes began appearing in the sand dune of Mt. Baldy. The story started when 6-year-old boy was suddenly swallowed by the 11 feet deep pit in the dune. Scientists investigated the site using ground penetrating radar and other methods but are not able to give any logical explanation for these holes.
1. LongerDays Ahead
The deceleration of the Earth’s rotation is very slow, approximately 17 milliseconds per hundred years. It is expected that after about 250 million years, a day will last 1.5 hours longer, our day will have increased from 24 to 25 hours.
MusicCredits:
Intro & Outro:
"DeepHaze" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Background Music :
"Not As It Seems" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Hudson Bay Trip

Filmed by GOPRO hero 3, filmed at 1080p

published: 09 Jan 2015

Most Beautiful Places in Canada, 20 Amazing Places in Canada (Part 2)

Most BeautifulPlaces in Canada, 20 Amazing Places in Canada (Part 2). Toronto waterfront
For the best views of Canada's 553.33-meter-high CN Tower, Rogers Centre sports stadium and the surrounding financial towers, you need to hit Lake Ontario (pictured).Toronto HarbourTours offer tours for those who want to see the city's skyline, marinas and surrounding islands. most beautiful places canada, best places canada, prince edward island, niagara falls, peggy's cove, most beautiful places world, best places ini the world, best places to visit in the world, beautiful place in the word, travel, travel guide, traveler guide,
Lakes of Saskatchewan
The province of Saskatchewan has more than 100,000 lakes. Otter Lake (pictured) is an excellent destination for fishing, camping, canoeing and,...

Let's Go Perfume Shopping @ Hudson's Bay (Rotterdam)

Just browsing :) Hudson's BayDepartment Store just opened in The Netherlands / Holland so I thought I'd pop in and check out their perfume selection. Enjoy and sorry about the shakiness. :D
Here's my other perfume channel with my buddy Andrew (HollywoodSilent Film):
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCrSIr5vZeIuo5BCl3k80dA
Here's my Instagram (delicious_delightfulness)
https://www.instagram.com/delicious_delightfulness/

published: 15 Sep 2017

Shopping in Toronto - Canada

World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube
Toronto - CanadaTravelGuide, Tourismhttp://bit.ly/1hapqpM
Shopping in Toronto - Canada
The shopping capital of Canada, Toronto has everything from super-sized malls to uber-trendy boutiques. Shopping in the city is highly seasonal - in summer the open air markets seethe with bargain hunters haggling over vintage finds; in winter, shoppers move indoors or underground into heated malls. The main shopping areas are in central Toronto, but each neighbourhood has its own individual commercial character.
Key areas:
As a vital, densely populated hub, the city centre is filled with open-air shopping streets, each with its own character. Queen and College streets attract style-conscious 20- and 30-somethings. Fashions are original, often wit...

published: 03 Nov 2013

LEARNING TO SAIL on the Hudson River ! (Things To Do In NYC)⛵

Have you always wanted to learn to sail? Adriana and I try it out on the Hudson River of NYC with TribecaSailing and vlog the entire experience. This is one of the best things to do in New York City for a couple. You get close to many landmarks, like the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. If you want more information click the link below and be sure to subscribe so you don't miss out on any of our adventures from NYC and around the world !
BOOK A TRIP WITH CAPTAIN DAVID: http://www.tribecasailing.com/
SUBSCRIBE HERE: http://bit.ly/2ddsVMs
NYC TIPS AND TRICKS PLAYLIST: http://bit.ly/2wXVuLs
Offers for Members of the Barrio:
WANT $40.00 off your first Airbnb stay?: http://bit.ly/2keuwJf
JoinScott's CheapFlights to get emailed/texted about the best flight deals around the World: http...

Canada By Train: The Complete VIA Rail Travel Guide

Majestic in its vastness, Canada is a fascinating travel destination. VIA Rail, Canada's national passenger train service, makes visiting this breathtaking country a truly memorable journey. Canada by Train is the complete guidebook to train travel with VIARail. Full of useful facts and vivid photographs, this guide provides current, comprehensive details on train services and safety measures. The guide features over 500 full-color illustrations and photographs; updated information on schedules, fares and pass options; mile-by-mile route guides; practical suggestions on traveling light, settling in sleepers and coaches; and much more. Whether touring the Atlantic region, visiting the Rockies, or traveling across country, Canada by Train makes the landscape come alive.

published: 18 Jul 2009

Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau

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David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network pro...

Hey Canada, What Are YOU Made Of? [Hudson's Bay Co. 2010]

You could win a trip to the Vancouver 2010Olympic Winter Games! Come on Canada, tell us what YOU'RE made of at: http://whatareyoumadeof.hbc.com/. Upload a story, photo or video. The best entry will win a trip for two to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games to watch the men's gold medal ice hockey game, including flights, cash, CanadianOlympicTeam replica gear and more!
Hudson's Bay Co. has a proud legacy of supporting Canadian amateur athletes. From the first time our Canadian Olympic winter athletes wore Hudson's Bay Company outfits in 1936 to its ongoing fundraising efforts in support of Canada's Olympic and Paralympic teams, our company is fully committed to supporting the hopes and dreams of Canada's amateur athletes.

Top TravelPlace & Guides, The VancouverNational Historic ReserveHistoric District includes a wide variety of buildings erected by the Hudson's Bay Company, U.S. Army and the National Park Service at Fort Vancouver, Vancouver, Washington. The district includes reconstructions of historic buildings that were excluded from previously-designated historic districts on the grounds that they had no intrinsic history. Structures within the district include the reconstructed Fort Vancouver, Army buildings from the 1940s, and Mission 66-era ParkService facilities. More info visit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vancouver_National_Historic_Reserve_Historic_District
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national historic landmarks

Top TravelPlace & Guides, The VancouverNational Historic ReserveHistoric District includes a wide variety of buildings erected by the Hudson's Bay Company, U.S. Army and the National Park Service at Fort Vancouver, Vancouver, Washington. The district includes reconstructions of historic buildings that were excluded from previously-designated historic districts on the grounds that they had no intrinsic history. Structures within the district include the reconstructed Fort Vancouver, Army buildings from the 1940s, and Mission 66-era ParkService facilities. More info visit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vancouver_National_Historic_Reserve_Historic_District
vancouver national historic reserve reviews
vancouver national historic reserve trust
fort vancouver national historic site
inn at the historic reserve
water resources education center vancouver
fort vancouver national historic
fort vancouver barracks
fort vancouver events
vancouver national historic reserve trust national historic register of homes
fort vancouver national historic reserve
national register of historic places
fort vancouver national historic reserve trust
california historic register
vancouver national historic reserve act of 1995
national historic landmarks

Just browsing :) Hudson's BayDepartment Store just opened in The Netherlands / Holland so I thought I'd pop in and check out their perfume selection. Enjoy and sorry about the shakiness. :D
Here's my other perfume channel with my buddy Andrew (HollywoodSilent Film):
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCrSIr5vZeIuo5BCl3k80dA
Here's my Instagram (delicious_delightfulness)
https://www.instagram.com/delicious_delightfulness/

Just browsing :) Hudson's BayDepartment Store just opened in The Netherlands / Holland so I thought I'd pop in and check out their perfume selection. Enjoy and sorry about the shakiness. :D
Here's my other perfume channel with my buddy Andrew (HollywoodSilent Film):
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCrSIr5vZeIuo5BCl3k80dA
Here's my Instagram (delicious_delightfulness)
https://www.instagram.com/delicious_delightfulness/

World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube
Toronto - CanadaTravelGuide, Tourismhttp://bit.ly/1hapqpM
Shopping in Toronto - Canada
The shopping capital of Canada, Toronto has everything from super-sized malls to uber-trendy boutiques. Shopping in the city is highly seasonal - in summer the open air markets seethe with bargain hunters haggling over vintage finds; in winter, shoppers move indoors or underground into heated malls. The main shopping areas are in central Toronto, but each neighbourhood has its own individual commercial character.
Key areas:
As a vital, densely populated hub, the city centre is filled with open-air shopping streets, each with its own character. Queen and College streets attract style-conscious 20- and 30-somethings. Fashions are original, often with an emphasis on obscure labels, both domestic and imported. Queen Street West also is home to a variety of furniture shops, some offering cutting-edge modern designs and others displaying second-hand pieces from 10 to 50 years old. Yorkville features more upmarket shopping - Prada, Chanel, Louis Vuitton - including Holt Renfrew, 50 Bloor Street West, the Canadian equivalent to New York's Saks or London'sHarrods. Yonge Street offers shopping of every variety from its beginnings near the waterfront right to the northern edge of the city.
Markets:
The bounty of the vast Canadian landscape can be appreciated at St Lawrence Market, at the corner of Jarvis and Front streets. Here, visitors can take in the sight of piles of fresh fish laid out on beds of ice, pick among butcher shops, choose between delicatessens, bakeries and a host of fruit and vegetable shops overflowing with produce. The market is open Tuesday to Thursday 0800-1800, Friday 0800-1900 and Saturday 0500-1700. There is also a farmer's market open Saturdays 0500-1500 and an antiques markets on Sundays from dawn until 1700.
Shopping centres:
Thankfully, Toronto has not succumbed to mall culture to the same degree as its neighbours in the USA - most malls tend to be firmly located in the suburbs, although there are a number of shopping concourses at the bases of the larger downtown office towers, linked by underground passageways.
The one important mall that has managed to take root downtown is the Eaton Centre, located at the intersection of Yonge and Dundas streets. The Eaton Centre is a mall for non-mall types - lots of shopping in a more soothing environment, with a huge fountain, a ceiling that is a vast barrel vault of windows and a famous sculpture of flying Canada geese.
Opening hours:
Shopping is available seven days a week and stores are generally open 1000-1800, although it is common to find some open as late as 2200, especially on Thursday and Friday.
Souvenirs:
Good gifts and Toronto souvenirs are Canadian and Inuit art, local designer threads, Hudson's Baypoint blankets and maple syrup products. The traditional Torontonian sartorial souvenir is a T-shirt emblazoned with an image of the city skyline, but for something a little less outré try the University of Toronto Bookshop and Gift store
Tax information:
In addition to the 5% Goods and Services Tax (GST), a provincial sales tax of 8% is added to the listed price of most purchases. Please note that GST can no longer be redeemed by non-residents.
=============================
Toronto Travel Guide, Toronto Tourism, Toronto Vacation, Toronto Attractions, Canada Travel Guide, Canada Tourism, Canada Vacation, Canada Attractions, Toronto, Canada, North America, Toronto Shopping, Toronto Hotels, Toronto Introduction, Toronto Museums, Toronto Restaurants, Toronto Transport, Travel Guide, Tourism, Vacation, Attractions === Toronto - Canada Travel Guide, Tourism, Vacation, Attractions

World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube
Toronto - CanadaTravelGuide, Tourismhttp://bit.ly/1hapqpM
Shopping in Toronto - Canada
The shopping capital of Canada, Toronto has everything from super-sized malls to uber-trendy boutiques. Shopping in the city is highly seasonal - in summer the open air markets seethe with bargain hunters haggling over vintage finds; in winter, shoppers move indoors or underground into heated malls. The main shopping areas are in central Toronto, but each neighbourhood has its own individual commercial character.
Key areas:
As a vital, densely populated hub, the city centre is filled with open-air shopping streets, each with its own character. Queen and College streets attract style-conscious 20- and 30-somethings. Fashions are original, often with an emphasis on obscure labels, both domestic and imported. Queen Street West also is home to a variety of furniture shops, some offering cutting-edge modern designs and others displaying second-hand pieces from 10 to 50 years old. Yorkville features more upmarket shopping - Prada, Chanel, Louis Vuitton - including Holt Renfrew, 50 Bloor Street West, the Canadian equivalent to New York's Saks or London'sHarrods. Yonge Street offers shopping of every variety from its beginnings near the waterfront right to the northern edge of the city.
Markets:
The bounty of the vast Canadian landscape can be appreciated at St Lawrence Market, at the corner of Jarvis and Front streets. Here, visitors can take in the sight of piles of fresh fish laid out on beds of ice, pick among butcher shops, choose between delicatessens, bakeries and a host of fruit and vegetable shops overflowing with produce. The market is open Tuesday to Thursday 0800-1800, Friday 0800-1900 and Saturday 0500-1700. There is also a farmer's market open Saturdays 0500-1500 and an antiques markets on Sundays from dawn until 1700.
Shopping centres:
Thankfully, Toronto has not succumbed to mall culture to the same degree as its neighbours in the USA - most malls tend to be firmly located in the suburbs, although there are a number of shopping concourses at the bases of the larger downtown office towers, linked by underground passageways.
The one important mall that has managed to take root downtown is the Eaton Centre, located at the intersection of Yonge and Dundas streets. The Eaton Centre is a mall for non-mall types - lots of shopping in a more soothing environment, with a huge fountain, a ceiling that is a vast barrel vault of windows and a famous sculpture of flying Canada geese.
Opening hours:
Shopping is available seven days a week and stores are generally open 1000-1800, although it is common to find some open as late as 2200, especially on Thursday and Friday.
Souvenirs:
Good gifts and Toronto souvenirs are Canadian and Inuit art, local designer threads, Hudson's Baypoint blankets and maple syrup products. The traditional Torontonian sartorial souvenir is a T-shirt emblazoned with an image of the city skyline, but for something a little less outré try the University of Toronto Bookshop and Gift store
Tax information:
In addition to the 5% Goods and Services Tax (GST), a provincial sales tax of 8% is added to the listed price of most purchases. Please note that GST can no longer be redeemed by non-residents.
=============================
Toronto Travel Guide, Toronto Tourism, Toronto Vacation, Toronto Attractions, Canada Travel Guide, Canada Tourism, Canada Vacation, Canada Attractions, Toronto, Canada, North America, Toronto Shopping, Toronto Hotels, Toronto Introduction, Toronto Museums, Toronto Restaurants, Toronto Transport, Travel Guide, Tourism, Vacation, Attractions === Toronto - Canada Travel Guide, Tourism, Vacation, Attractions

Have you always wanted to learn to sail? Adriana and I try it out on the Hudson River of NYC with TribecaSailing and vlog the entire experience. This is one of the best things to do in New York City for a couple. You get close to many landmarks, like the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. If you want more information click the link below and be sure to subscribe so you don't miss out on any of our adventures from NYC and around the world !
BOOK A TRIP WITH CAPTAIN DAVID: http://www.tribecasailing.com/
SUBSCRIBE HERE: http://bit.ly/2ddsVMs
NYC TIPS AND TRICKS PLAYLIST: http://bit.ly/2wXVuLs
Offers for Members of the Barrio:
WANT $40.00 off your first Airbnb stay?: http://bit.ly/2keuwJf
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I'm Jon Barr, an ex-sportscaster turned travel vlogger. If you're looking for waste no-time ,incredibly informative videos loaded with useful travel tips, you've come to the right place! My vlogs are made for the savvy traveler. Subscribe to learn all of my travel tips, tricks, and secrets that have helped me visit 33 countries. Based out of NYC but always on the go. Don't be shy to reach out via Social Media or Private Message.

Have you always wanted to learn to sail? Adriana and I try it out on the Hudson River of NYC with TribecaSailing and vlog the entire experience. This is one of the best things to do in New York City for a couple. You get close to many landmarks, like the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. If you want more information click the link below and be sure to subscribe so you don't miss out on any of our adventures from NYC and around the world !
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"More About Here Be Barr"
I'm Jon Barr, an ex-sportscaster turned travel vlogger. If you're looking for waste no-time ,incredibly informative videos loaded with useful travel tips, you've come to the right place! My vlogs are made for the savvy traveler. Subscribe to learn all of my travel tips, tricks, and secrets that have helped me visit 33 countries. Based out of NYC but always on the go. Don't be shy to reach out via Social Media or Private Message.

HUDSON'S BAY SHOPPING HAUL TORONTO

Shoe styles in Amsterdam, Holland are especially fashion forward.
Just this year in Holland, I found some great shoes. In this video, you see that I found the s...

Shoe styles in Amsterdam, Holland are especially fashion forward.
Just this year in Holland, I found some great shoes. In this video, you see that I found the same at Hudson's Bay.
Baldwin Village is a commercial enclave in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the west of downtown Toronto, within the Grange Park neighbourhood, one block north of Dundas Street West, between Beverley and McCaul Streets. The former modestly sized homes on the street have been converted to restaurants and small shops selling arts, crafts and curios.
the street was laid out and named after William Warren Baldwin, who owned much of the area, in the early nineteenth century. The neighbourhood developed in the early 20th century as the Jewish ghetto moved westward from its original location in The Ward towards what became the Kensington MarketJewish community, and the strip became home to a number of Jewish stores and restaurants. As the Jewish community moved north from downtown, the area's proximity to Chinatown led it to be populated by Chinese-Canadians. Also close to the University of Toronto and surrounded by the area known as the "Student Ghetto" it also became a centre for the 1960s youth movements. Most notably it was the central location for draft dodgers from the Vietnam War in Toronto. The draft dodgers converted a number of homes to shops catering to the new community. In 1978 the first cafe on the block opened, and since then the area has become one of the best-known restaurant districts in Toronto. Mandel's Creamery at 29 Baldwin Street, the last remnant of the block's Jewish heritage, closed in 1995 after 90 years of operation, though the Yiddish lettering on its window has been preserved by the John's Italian Caffe, the neighbouring establishment at 27 Baldwin which expanded into the Mandel's former property
Etsu Japanese restaurant downtown Toronto, chilling with Jeffrey Ma, our conversation will be left to your own imagination :D

Shoe styles in Amsterdam, Holland are especially fashion forward.
Just this year in Holland, I found some great shoes. In this video, you see that I found the same at Hudson's Bay.
Baldwin Village is a commercial enclave in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the west of downtown Toronto, within the Grange Park neighbourhood, one block north of Dundas Street West, between Beverley and McCaul Streets. The former modestly sized homes on the street have been converted to restaurants and small shops selling arts, crafts and curios.
the street was laid out and named after William Warren Baldwin, who owned much of the area, in the early nineteenth century. The neighbourhood developed in the early 20th century as the Jewish ghetto moved westward from its original location in The Ward towards what became the Kensington MarketJewish community, and the strip became home to a number of Jewish stores and restaurants. As the Jewish community moved north from downtown, the area's proximity to Chinatown led it to be populated by Chinese-Canadians. Also close to the University of Toronto and surrounded by the area known as the "Student Ghetto" it also became a centre for the 1960s youth movements. Most notably it was the central location for draft dodgers from the Vietnam War in Toronto. The draft dodgers converted a number of homes to shops catering to the new community. In 1978 the first cafe on the block opened, and since then the area has become one of the best-known restaurant districts in Toronto. Mandel's Creamery at 29 Baldwin Street, the last remnant of the block's Jewish heritage, closed in 1995 after 90 years of operation, though the Yiddish lettering on its window has been preserved by the John's Italian Caffe, the neighbouring establishment at 27 Baldwin which expanded into the Mandel's former property
Etsu Japanese restaurant downtown Toronto, chilling with Jeffrey Ma, our conversation will be left to your own imagination :D

published:23 Feb 2016

views:1373

back

What to Buy in November... Electronics, Houseware, Games & more...| Ebates Canada

Majestic in its vastness, Canada is a fascinating travel destination. VIA Rail, Canada's national passenger train service, makes visiting this breathtaking country a truly memorable journey. Canada by Train is the complete guidebook to train travel with VIARail. Full of useful facts and vivid photographs, this guide provides current, comprehensive details on train services and safety measures. The guide features over 500 full-color illustrations and photographs; updated information on schedules, fares and pass options; mile-by-mile route guides; practical suggestions on traveling light, settling in sleepers and coaches; and much more. Whether touring the Atlantic region, visiting the Rockies, or traveling across country, Canada by Train makes the landscape come alive.

Majestic in its vastness, Canada is a fascinating travel destination. VIA Rail, Canada's national passenger train service, makes visiting this breathtaking country a truly memorable journey. Canada by Train is the complete guidebook to train travel with VIARail. Full of useful facts and vivid photographs, this guide provides current, comprehensive details on train services and safety measures. The guide features over 500 full-color illustrations and photographs; updated information on schedules, fares and pass options; mile-by-mile route guides; practical suggestions on traveling light, settling in sleepers and coaches; and much more. Whether touring the Atlantic region, visiting the Rockies, or traveling across country, Canada by Train makes the landscape come alive.

Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPubl...

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPublicTV
Find the latest programming updates: #WhatsOnKSPS
David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network providing quality programming.

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPublicTV
Find the latest programming updates: #WhatsOnKSPS
David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network providing quality programming.

Canadian Rockies Vacations Guide, Banff National Park, Canadian Rockies 2017, Alberta Canada, Canadian Rockies & AlbertaToursThe CanadianRockies comprise the Canadian segment of the North AmericanRocky Mountains. They are the eastern part of the Canadian Cordillera, which is a system of multiple ranges of mountains which runs from the Canadian Prairies to the Pacific Coast. The Canadian Rockies mountain system comprises the southeastern part of this system, lying between the Interior Plains of Alberta and NortheasternBritish Columbia on the east to the Rocky Mountain Trench of BC on the west. The southern end borders Idaho and Montana of the USA. In geographic terms the boundary is at the Canada/US border, but in geological terms it might be considered to be at Marias Pass in northern Montana. The northern end is at the Liard River in northern British Columbia.
The Canadian Rockies have numerous high peaks and ranges, such as Mount Robson (3,954 m (12,972 ft)) and Mount Columbia (3,747 m (12,293 ft)). The Canadian Rockies are composed of shale and limestone. Much of the range is protected by national and provincial parks, several of which collectively comprise a World Heritage Site.
Rivers
--------
The Canadian Rockies are noted for being the source of several major river systems, and also for the many rivers within the range itself. The Rockies form the divide between the Pacific drainage on the west and that of Hudson Bay and the Arctic Ocean on the east. Of the range's rivers, only the Peace River penetrates the range. Notable rivers originating in the Canadian Rockies include the Fraser, Columbia, North Saskatchewan, Bow and Athabasca Rivers.
Geology
-------------
The Canadian Rockies are quite different in appearance and geology from the American Rockies to the south of them. The Canadian Rockies are composed of layered sedimentary rock such as limestone and shale, whereas the American Rockies are made mostly of metamorphic and igneous rock such as gneiss and granite.
The Canadian Rockies are overall more jagged than the American Rockies, because the Canadian Rockies have been more heavily glaciated, resulting in sharply pointed mountains separated by wide, U-shaped valleys gauged by glaciers, whereas the American Rockies are overall more rounded, with river-carved V-shaped valleys between them. The Canadian Rockies are cooler and wetter, giving them moister soil, bigger rivers, and more glaciers. The tree line is much lower in the Canadian Rockies than in the American Rockies.
Parks
----------
Five national parks are located within the Canadian Rockies, four of which are adjacent and make up the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks. These four parks are Banff, Jasper, Kootenay and Yoho. The fifth national park, Waterton is not adjacent to the others. Waterton lies farther south, straddling the Canada–US border as the Canadian half of the Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park. All five of these parks, combined with three British Columbia provincial parks, were declared a single UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984[4] for the unique mountain landscapes found there.
Numerous provincial parks are located in the Canadian Rockies, including Hamber, Mount Assiniboine and Mount Robson parks.
Throughout the Rockies, and especially in the national parks, the Alpine Club of Canada maintains a series of alpine huts for use by mountaineers and adventurers.
Geography
------------------
The Canadian Rockies are the easternmost part of the Canadian Cordillera, the collective name for the mountains of Western Canada. They form part of the American Cordillera, an essentially continuous sequence of mountain ranges that runs all the way from Alaska to the very tip of South America. The Cordillera in turn are the eastern part of the Pacific Ring of Fire that runs all the way around the Pacific Ocean.
East Kootenays
The Canadian Rockies are bounded on the east by the Canadian Prairies, on the west by the Rocky Mountain Trench, and on the north by the Liard River. Contrary to popular misconception, the Rockies do not extend north into Yukon or Alaska, or west into central British Columbia. North of the Liard River, the Mackenzie Mountains, which are a distinct mountain range, form a portion of the border between the Yukon and the Northwest Territories. The mountain ranges to the west of the Rocky Mountain Trench in southern British Columbia are called the Columbia Mountains, and are not considered to be part of the Rockies by Canadian geologists.

Canadian Rockies Vacations Guide, Banff National Park, Canadian Rockies 2017, Alberta Canada, Canadian Rockies & AlbertaToursThe CanadianRockies comprise the Canadian segment of the North AmericanRocky Mountains. They are the eastern part of the Canadian Cordillera, which is a system of multiple ranges of mountains which runs from the Canadian Prairies to the Pacific Coast. The Canadian Rockies mountain system comprises the southeastern part of this system, lying between the Interior Plains of Alberta and NortheasternBritish Columbia on the east to the Rocky Mountain Trench of BC on the west. The southern end borders Idaho and Montana of the USA. In geographic terms the boundary is at the Canada/US border, but in geological terms it might be considered to be at Marias Pass in northern Montana. The northern end is at the Liard River in northern British Columbia.
The Canadian Rockies have numerous high peaks and ranges, such as Mount Robson (3,954 m (12,972 ft)) and Mount Columbia (3,747 m (12,293 ft)). The Canadian Rockies are composed of shale and limestone. Much of the range is protected by national and provincial parks, several of which collectively comprise a World Heritage Site.
Rivers
--------
The Canadian Rockies are noted for being the source of several major river systems, and also for the many rivers within the range itself. The Rockies form the divide between the Pacific drainage on the west and that of Hudson Bay and the Arctic Ocean on the east. Of the range's rivers, only the Peace River penetrates the range. Notable rivers originating in the Canadian Rockies include the Fraser, Columbia, North Saskatchewan, Bow and Athabasca Rivers.
Geology
-------------
The Canadian Rockies are quite different in appearance and geology from the American Rockies to the south of them. The Canadian Rockies are composed of layered sedimentary rock such as limestone and shale, whereas the American Rockies are made mostly of metamorphic and igneous rock such as gneiss and granite.
The Canadian Rockies are overall more jagged than the American Rockies, because the Canadian Rockies have been more heavily glaciated, resulting in sharply pointed mountains separated by wide, U-shaped valleys gauged by glaciers, whereas the American Rockies are overall more rounded, with river-carved V-shaped valleys between them. The Canadian Rockies are cooler and wetter, giving them moister soil, bigger rivers, and more glaciers. The tree line is much lower in the Canadian Rockies than in the American Rockies.
Parks
----------
Five national parks are located within the Canadian Rockies, four of which are adjacent and make up the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks. These four parks are Banff, Jasper, Kootenay and Yoho. The fifth national park, Waterton is not adjacent to the others. Waterton lies farther south, straddling the Canada–US border as the Canadian half of the Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park. All five of these parks, combined with three British Columbia provincial parks, were declared a single UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984[4] for the unique mountain landscapes found there.
Numerous provincial parks are located in the Canadian Rockies, including Hamber, Mount Assiniboine and Mount Robson parks.
Throughout the Rockies, and especially in the national parks, the Alpine Club of Canada maintains a series of alpine huts for use by mountaineers and adventurers.
Geography
------------------
The Canadian Rockies are the easternmost part of the Canadian Cordillera, the collective name for the mountains of Western Canada. They form part of the American Cordillera, an essentially continuous sequence of mountain ranges that runs all the way from Alaska to the very tip of South America. The Cordillera in turn are the eastern part of the Pacific Ring of Fire that runs all the way around the Pacific Ocean.
East Kootenays
The Canadian Rockies are bounded on the east by the Canadian Prairies, on the west by the Rocky Mountain Trench, and on the north by the Liard River. Contrary to popular misconception, the Rockies do not extend north into Yukon or Alaska, or west into central British Columbia. North of the Liard River, the Mackenzie Mountains, which are a distinct mountain range, form a portion of the border between the Yukon and the Northwest Territories. The mountain ranges to the west of the Rocky Mountain Trench in southern British Columbia are called the Columbia Mountains, and are not considered to be part of the Rockies by Canadian geologists.

You could win a trip to the Vancouver 2010Olympic Winter Games! Come on Canada, tell us what YOU'RE made of at: http://whatareyoumadeof.hbc.com/. Upload a story, photo or video. The best entry will win a trip for two to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games to watch the men's gold medal ice hockey game, including flights, cash, CanadianOlympicTeam replica gear and more!
Hudson's Bay Co. has a proud legacy of supporting Canadian amateur athletes. From the first time our Canadian Olympic winter athletes wore Hudson's Bay Company outfits in 1936 to its ongoing fundraising efforts in support of Canada's Olympic and Paralympic teams, our company is fully committed to supporting the hopes and dreams of Canada's amateur athletes.

You could win a trip to the Vancouver 2010Olympic Winter Games! Come on Canada, tell us what YOU'RE made of at: http://whatareyoumadeof.hbc.com/. Upload a story, photo or video. The best entry will win a trip for two to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games to watch the men's gold medal ice hockey game, including flights, cash, CanadianOlympicTeam replica gear and more!
Hudson's Bay Co. has a proud legacy of supporting Canadian amateur athletes. From the first time our Canadian Olympic winter athletes wore Hudson's Bay Company outfits in 1936 to its ongoing fundraising efforts in support of Canada's Olympic and Paralympic teams, our company is fully committed to supporting the hopes and dreams of Canada's amateur athletes.

Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPublicTV
Find the latest programming updates: #WhatsOnKSPS
David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network pro...

Ant Steward, Around the world alone, in an open boat.

Ant Steward circumnavigated the world on a rather small open boat called "Zulu Dawn" but named "NCSChallenger" for the voyage.
He had nowhere to build his boat and talked a friend into letting him do it inside his apartment. Getting it into and out of the apartment must have been an interesting exercise. Resin smells and woodwork noises in the early hours eventually led to an enforced removal to Royal Cape Yacht Club, where she spent the last couple of months before launching.
He left Cape Town amid warm farewells from hundreds of people. Many expected to never see him again and talked of his foolishness. He said that if we thought that he was mad we should get to know his mother, then we would know where he got it from. He had decided that he was sane and the rest of us were crazy fo...

published: 21 Feb 2013

THE NEXT ECONOMY - Doug Tompkins

Doug Tompkins is a longtime wilderness advocate, mountaineer, organic farmer, activist, and philanthropist. But his first career was in business. He founded The North Face outdoor gear retailer in the 1960s, and then cofounded Esprit clothing, retiring from that in 1990 to concentrate on conservation work.
In 1992, Tompkins founded the Foundation for Deep Ecology, a philanthropic effort devoted to root causes of environmental crises; soon after, he started the ConservationLandTrust and, with his wife Kris, Conservacion Patagonica, focused on creating large-scale protected natural areas in Chile and Argentina. Tompkins has also helped produce numerous campaign-related exhibit format books on topics ranging from industrial forestry, factory farming, coal mining, and global energy crises...

published: 06 Mar 2013

Beluga Boat Concert - Churchill Manitoba

Explore Website - http://explore.org
Facebook http://goo.gl/SFRAfX - Twitter http://goo.gl/n03NNU
Swim with the belugas and relax to this magical concert on the BelugaBoat. Rob Knaggs plays his cello for the migrating pods of belugas. Find more of his work here https://www.robknaggs.com/
http://EXPLORE.org is the largest live nature cam network on the planet. We bring nature to you, raw, unscripted, and unedited. Enjoy the natural world as it unfolds in real time in front of our cameras. EXPLORE.org takes you to the most remote places around the globe, from the plains of Kenya, Africa to the riverbanks of Katmai, Alaska. Be sure to check out all the EXPLORE.org live cam channels.
Visit the full multicam experience: http://explore.org
Be sure to visit and subscribe to all your favori...

The future of artificial intelligence and self-driving cars

Stanford professors discuss their innovative research and the new technologies that will transform lives in the 21st century.
At a live taping of The Future of Everything, a SiriusXM radio program hosted by Stanford bioengineering professor Russ Altman, two Stanford engineering professors discussed their contributions to two of the tech world’s most cutting edges: artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles. Computer scientistFei-Fei Li and mechanical engineer Chris Gerdes spoke about their work pushing the boundaries of what machines can do, and the many ways that our lives will be impacted by interactions with technology in the very near future – if not today.
Li outlined some of the major advances that have pushed AI research forward in the years since she entered the field in 20...

Passage Diary: Mexico to the Marquesas

SV Estrellita 5.10b - Passage from Mexico to the Marquesas - 26 days
Video diaries throughout the voyage put together haphazardly and uploaded from Tahiti. There are sound issues which are partially our learning curve with our new GoPro camera.
This is part of the playlist of our circumnavigation so far: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL47x5_YuBIdOUMW7zUc4kqeKHdk0rPJx3
thegiddyupplan.blogspot.com Read more at http://
thegiddyupplan.blogspot.com

published: 13 Jun 2012

New York Terror Attack Results in Laura Loomer Uber Ban

ISIS affiliates are engaging in terror tactics around the globe, the latest happening just two days ago right here in NYC. Laura Loomer is getting in the faces of those who would dismiss this detail. Are UBER and LYFT doing enough to vet the drivers so many Americans rely upon when they tap their app?
Become a sponsor of Crowdsource the Truth and support the effort
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43wUVqtP6gZAUow6DKgQxzCCcKtRpjinV4fKvGmLCpLC6wst4KkYudsN9T3PosWjz3b5ADQU2RWAHSKMrzyLJdpg6V2AVb4
or email truth@crowdsourcethetruth.org for a secure Bitcoin sponsorship link
Buy ...

The ‘Mandela Effect’ is a label which has been given to unexplained extraordinary events which have been happening worldwide. It is undeniable that these changes and events are occurring as reported.
On a daily basis we record portions of our earth as it is so we have documented evidence as we watch new islands form and new land bridges be installed.
The creator of our world is the one behind the Mandela Effect. This is not a guess or a theory... it is a fact. We hope to be able to prove this to you. The truth really is, sometimes, stranger than fiction.
http://mandelaeffect.site
http://blog.mandelaeffect.site
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXWOsL9uDdtM8xWsGZAMOrg
To request video coverage of your local area, or any area of interest to you http://blog.mandelaeffect.site/forumdisplay....

LoveBears - http://goo.gl/5Ba5Fl
http://explore.org - Facebook http://goo.gl/SFRAfX - Twitter http://goo.gl/n03NNU
WatchThe CapeSouthCamera - Churchill Cam, Wapusk National Park - LIVE.
This camera is located at Cape Churchill, within Wapusk National Park
(NP) in northern Manitoba.
In Wapusk NP, Parks Canada protects one of the world's largest concentrations of polar bear maternity dens (where female bears give birth).
Polar bears congregate in October and November at Cape Churchill, along the Hudson Bay coast, waiting for the sea ice to form. The bears depend on the sea ice as a platform from which to hunt ringed seals, their main food source.
http://EXPLORE.org is the largest live nature cam network on the planet. We bring nature to you, raw, unscripted, and unedited. Enjoy the...

published: 30 Jun 2015

Thunder Bay Thunder vs Berkeley Bears

42nd AnnualTournament
July 15th – 22nd, 2017
For over 40 years teams have traveled from across North America and from all corners of the globe to participate in the world's premier SeniorHockey Tournament. Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament is a week-long celebration of sportsmanship, camaraderie and seriously competitive hockey.
You'll love this tournament for the great friends you make, but you'll keep coming back because this tournament has it all!

published: 19 Jul 2017

Mum, Heroin and Me (Addiction Documentary) - Real Stories

Hannah is 20 and a heroin addict. She is blonde and beautiful and comes from a good family, who care about her. This documentary follows Hannah and her families ongoing battle with addiction.
Want to watch more full-length Documentaries?
Click here: http://bit.ly/1GOzpIu
Follow us on Twitter for more - https://twitter.com/realstoriesdocs
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Content licensed from ITVGlobal. Any queries, please contact us at: realstories@littledotstudios.com
Produced by ITV Studios

Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPubl...

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPublicTV
Find the latest programming updates: #WhatsOnKSPS
David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network providing quality programming.

View more from our digital library: http://video.ksps.org/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ksps
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KSPSPublicTV
Find the latest programming updates: #WhatsOnKSPS
David Thompson is revered as a national hero in Canada, but is less well known to Americans. "Uncharted Territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau" focuses on the years 1807-1812, the time that Thompson spent primarily in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and northwestern United States, and the significant contributions that he made to the history of the American Northwest.
KSPS exists to improve the quality of life of each person we reach. KSPS content broadens horizons; engages and connects; enlightens, inspires and educates. KSPS is an international multimedia network providing quality programming.

Ant Steward circumnavigated the world on a rather small open boat called "Zulu Dawn" but named "NCSChallenger" for the voyage.
He had nowhere to build his boat and talked a friend into letting him do it inside his apartment. Getting it into and out of the apartment must have been an interesting exercise. Resin smells and woodwork noises in the early hours eventually led to an enforced removal to Royal Cape Yacht Club, where she spent the last couple of months before launching.
He left Cape Town amid warm farewells from hundreds of people. Many expected to never see him again and talked of his foolishness. He said that if we thought that he was mad we should get to know his mother, then we would know where he got it from. He had decided that he was sane and the rest of us were crazy for staying behind. It would have been a crowded boat if we had not.
More about it on http://dudleydix.blogspot.fr/2013/10/anthony-steward-around-alone-in-open.html
by Anthony Steward, "Dudley Dix is one in a million. He was brave enough to develop and design a hull for this type of voyaging. He is a great designer( I survived) and he is a great teacher and listener. Also a very humble gracious person."

Ant Steward circumnavigated the world on a rather small open boat called "Zulu Dawn" but named "NCSChallenger" for the voyage.
He had nowhere to build his boat and talked a friend into letting him do it inside his apartment. Getting it into and out of the apartment must have been an interesting exercise. Resin smells and woodwork noises in the early hours eventually led to an enforced removal to Royal Cape Yacht Club, where she spent the last couple of months before launching.
He left Cape Town amid warm farewells from hundreds of people. Many expected to never see him again and talked of his foolishness. He said that if we thought that he was mad we should get to know his mother, then we would know where he got it from. He had decided that he was sane and the rest of us were crazy for staying behind. It would have been a crowded boat if we had not.
More about it on http://dudleydix.blogspot.fr/2013/10/anthony-steward-around-alone-in-open.html
by Anthony Steward, "Dudley Dix is one in a million. He was brave enough to develop and design a hull for this type of voyaging. He is a great designer( I survived) and he is a great teacher and listener. Also a very humble gracious person."

THE NEXT ECONOMY - Doug Tompkins

Doug Tompkins is a longtime wilderness advocate, mountaineer, organic farmer, activist, and philanthropist. But his first career was in business. He founded The...

Doug Tompkins is a longtime wilderness advocate, mountaineer, organic farmer, activist, and philanthropist. But his first career was in business. He founded The North Face outdoor gear retailer in the 1960s, and then cofounded Esprit clothing, retiring from that in 1990 to concentrate on conservation work.
In 1992, Tompkins founded the Foundation for Deep Ecology, a philanthropic effort devoted to root causes of environmental crises; soon after, he started the ConservationLandTrust and, with his wife Kris, Conservacion Patagonica, focused on creating large-scale protected natural areas in Chile and Argentina. Tompkins has also helped produce numerous campaign-related exhibit format books on topics ranging from industrial forestry, factory farming, coal mining, and global energy crises, among others.
A consistent principle that informs Tompkins activities is that the "present eco-social crisis demands a response—that individuals who recognize the great unraveling of natural and human communities across the globe have a responsibility to act to stop it." Working to reverse the extinction crisis and build a more sane and sustainable culture requires both defensive and proactive strategies.
Tompkins's earliest conservation activism sprang from his love for wilderness and experience as a mountaineer. Climbing trips around the globe provided a disturbing view of how wild nature everywhere was under assault by human activity. His ecological worldview deepened during the 1970s and 1980s through a self-guided immersion in ecological literature including the writings of Norwegian philosopher and mountaineer Arne Naess, father of the deep ecology movement. Tompkins has written, "that the influences of Arne Naess, John Muir, David Ehrenfeld, Paul Shepard, Henry David Thoreau, Aldo Leopold and many others put me so firmly on a 'deep' ecological path."
By the late 1980s Tompkins saw that the consumer culture that he'd helped promote was a destructive manifestation of an industrial growth economy toxic to nature. He decided to devote his wealth to endow an environmental foundation with an activist orientation. The foundation has embodied the idea that strategic philanthropy can support innovative, biocentric activists tackling root causes—not merely symptoms—of ecological destruction; vigorous and uncompromising advocacy on behalf of wild nature.

Doug Tompkins is a longtime wilderness advocate, mountaineer, organic farmer, activist, and philanthropist. But his first career was in business. He founded The North Face outdoor gear retailer in the 1960s, and then cofounded Esprit clothing, retiring from that in 1990 to concentrate on conservation work.
In 1992, Tompkins founded the Foundation for Deep Ecology, a philanthropic effort devoted to root causes of environmental crises; soon after, he started the ConservationLandTrust and, with his wife Kris, Conservacion Patagonica, focused on creating large-scale protected natural areas in Chile and Argentina. Tompkins has also helped produce numerous campaign-related exhibit format books on topics ranging from industrial forestry, factory farming, coal mining, and global energy crises, among others.
A consistent principle that informs Tompkins activities is that the "present eco-social crisis demands a response—that individuals who recognize the great unraveling of natural and human communities across the globe have a responsibility to act to stop it." Working to reverse the extinction crisis and build a more sane and sustainable culture requires both defensive and proactive strategies.
Tompkins's earliest conservation activism sprang from his love for wilderness and experience as a mountaineer. Climbing trips around the globe provided a disturbing view of how wild nature everywhere was under assault by human activity. His ecological worldview deepened during the 1970s and 1980s through a self-guided immersion in ecological literature including the writings of Norwegian philosopher and mountaineer Arne Naess, father of the deep ecology movement. Tompkins has written, "that the influences of Arne Naess, John Muir, David Ehrenfeld, Paul Shepard, Henry David Thoreau, Aldo Leopold and many others put me so firmly on a 'deep' ecological path."
By the late 1980s Tompkins saw that the consumer culture that he'd helped promote was a destructive manifestation of an industrial growth economy toxic to nature. He decided to devote his wealth to endow an environmental foundation with an activist orientation. The foundation has embodied the idea that strategic philanthropy can support innovative, biocentric activists tackling root causes—not merely symptoms—of ecological destruction; vigorous and uncompromising advocacy on behalf of wild nature.

Explore Website - http://explore.org
Facebook http://goo.gl/SFRAfX - Twitter http://goo.gl/n03NNU
Swim with the belugas and relax to this magical concert on the BelugaBoat. Rob Knaggs plays his cello for the migrating pods of belugas. Find more of his work here https://www.robknaggs.com/
http://EXPLORE.org is the largest live nature cam network on the planet. We bring nature to you, raw, unscripted, and unedited. Enjoy the natural world as it unfolds in real time in front of our cameras. EXPLORE.org takes you to the most remote places around the globe, from the plains of Kenya, Africa to the riverbanks of Katmai, Alaska. Be sure to check out all the EXPLORE.org live cam channels.
Visit the full multicam experience: http://explore.org
Be sure to visit and subscribe to all your favorite EXPLORE live-cam channels.
Explore Main Channel http://goo.gl/9L2vjH
Explore Africa http://goo.gl/8GXlAz
Explore Bears http://goo.gl/bKBhR8
Explore BirdsBats Bees https://goo.gl/chM5Zp
Explore CatsLionsTigers https://goo.gl/AQd7Zf
Explore Dog Bless You http://goo.gl/F01N6i
Explore FarmLife https://goo.gl/E2KcZQ
Explore Oceans http://goo.gl/6lKaus
Explore Sunsets http://goo.gl/zfG1DI
Explore Zen Dens http://goo.gl/Id1WMF

Explore Website - http://explore.org
Facebook http://goo.gl/SFRAfX - Twitter http://goo.gl/n03NNU
Swim with the belugas and relax to this magical concert on the BelugaBoat. Rob Knaggs plays his cello for the migrating pods of belugas. Find more of his work here https://www.robknaggs.com/
http://EXPLORE.org is the largest live nature cam network on the planet. We bring nature to you, raw, unscripted, and unedited. Enjoy the natural world as it unfolds in real time in front of our cameras. EXPLORE.org takes you to the most remote places around the globe, from the plains of Kenya, Africa to the riverbanks of Katmai, Alaska. Be sure to check out all the EXPLORE.org live cam channels.
Visit the full multicam experience: http://explore.org
Be sure to visit and subscribe to all your favorite EXPLORE live-cam channels.
Explore Main Channel http://goo.gl/9L2vjH
Explore Africa http://goo.gl/8GXlAz
Explore Bears http://goo.gl/bKBhR8
Explore BirdsBats Bees https://goo.gl/chM5Zp
Explore CatsLionsTigers https://goo.gl/AQd7Zf
Explore Dog Bless You http://goo.gl/F01N6i
Explore FarmLife https://goo.gl/E2KcZQ
Explore Oceans http://goo.gl/6lKaus
Explore Sunsets http://goo.gl/zfG1DI
Explore Zen Dens http://goo.gl/Id1WMF

Stanford professors discuss their innovative research and the new technologies that will transform lives in the 21st century.
At a live taping of The Future of Everything, a SiriusXM radio program hosted by Stanford bioengineering professor Russ Altman, two Stanford engineering professors discussed their contributions to two of the tech world’s most cutting edges: artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles. Computer scientistFei-Fei Li and mechanical engineer Chris Gerdes spoke about their work pushing the boundaries of what machines can do, and the many ways that our lives will be impacted by interactions with technology in the very near future – if not today.
Li outlined some of the major advances that have pushed AI research forward in the years since she entered the field in 2000, a period in which data collection and computing power flourished and “started to converge in a way that most people didn’t expect.” After touching on her seminal work in automated image classification, Li moved on to some of her current projects “using AI to play the guardian angel role in health care.” For instance, she’s working on how sensors installed in senior living facilities can balance care with independence, and track living behaviors such as motion patterns, social activity, nutrition intake and sleep patterns – all of which could help early detection of things like dementia. “This is why I call it a guardian angel. It’s quiet, it’s continuous, it doesn’t interrupt your life, but it’s there for you and providing the help when needed.”
As a leader in the field of self-driving cars, Gerdes said he’s confident that we can soon give cars the skills of the very best human drivers, and maybe even better than that. The bigger issues, he said, have more to do with designing public policies for self-driving cars and asking questions like whether we program automated vehicles to do what humans do or what the law says. And we can’t afford to put these questions off. “The proliferation of this technology will be much faster than people realize,” Gerdes said. “The real risk is how do we make sure that it’s accessible, affordable, sustainable transportation for everyone.”
Li and Gerdes agreed that the question is less whether artificial intelligence and smart machines will happen, but rather what we need to do to responsibly prepare for them. “With the speed of technology improving, the age of humans and machines coworking and coexisting together has begun,” Li said. “And this is more reason to invest in more basic science research, from technology to laws to moral philosophy and ethics to really give us guidance in terms of how humans can coexist with machines.”

Stanford professors discuss their innovative research and the new technologies that will transform lives in the 21st century.
At a live taping of The Future of Everything, a SiriusXM radio program hosted by Stanford bioengineering professor Russ Altman, two Stanford engineering professors discussed their contributions to two of the tech world’s most cutting edges: artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles. Computer scientistFei-Fei Li and mechanical engineer Chris Gerdes spoke about their work pushing the boundaries of what machines can do, and the many ways that our lives will be impacted by interactions with technology in the very near future – if not today.
Li outlined some of the major advances that have pushed AI research forward in the years since she entered the field in 2000, a period in which data collection and computing power flourished and “started to converge in a way that most people didn’t expect.” After touching on her seminal work in automated image classification, Li moved on to some of her current projects “using AI to play the guardian angel role in health care.” For instance, she’s working on how sensors installed in senior living facilities can balance care with independence, and track living behaviors such as motion patterns, social activity, nutrition intake and sleep patterns – all of which could help early detection of things like dementia. “This is why I call it a guardian angel. It’s quiet, it’s continuous, it doesn’t interrupt your life, but it’s there for you and providing the help when needed.”
As a leader in the field of self-driving cars, Gerdes said he’s confident that we can soon give cars the skills of the very best human drivers, and maybe even better than that. The bigger issues, he said, have more to do with designing public policies for self-driving cars and asking questions like whether we program automated vehicles to do what humans do or what the law says. And we can’t afford to put these questions off. “The proliferation of this technology will be much faster than people realize,” Gerdes said. “The real risk is how do we make sure that it’s accessible, affordable, sustainable transportation for everyone.”
Li and Gerdes agreed that the question is less whether artificial intelligence and smart machines will happen, but rather what we need to do to responsibly prepare for them. “With the speed of technology improving, the age of humans and machines coworking and coexisting together has begun,” Li said. “And this is more reason to invest in more basic science research, from technology to laws to moral philosophy and ethics to really give us guidance in terms of how humans can coexist with machines.”

SV Estrellita 5.10b - Passage from Mexico to the Marquesas - 26 days
Video diaries throughout the voyage put together haphazardly and uploaded from Tahiti. There are sound issues which are partially our learning curve with our new GoPro camera.
This is part of the playlist of our circumnavigation so far: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL47x5_YuBIdOUMW7zUc4kqeKHdk0rPJx3
thegiddyupplan.blogspot.com Read more at http://
thegiddyupplan.blogspot.com

SV Estrellita 5.10b - Passage from Mexico to the Marquesas - 26 days
Video diaries throughout the voyage put together haphazardly and uploaded from Tahiti. There are sound issues which are partially our learning curve with our new GoPro camera.
This is part of the playlist of our circumnavigation so far: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL47x5_YuBIdOUMW7zUc4kqeKHdk0rPJx3
thegiddyupplan.blogspot.com Read more at http://
thegiddyupplan.blogspot.com

New York Terror Attack Results in Laura Loomer Uber Ban

ISIS affiliates are engaging in terror tactics around the globe, the latest happening just two days ago right here in NYC. Laura Loomer is getting in the faces...

ISIS affiliates are engaging in terror tactics around the globe, the latest happening just two days ago right here in NYC. Laura Loomer is getting in the faces of those who would dismiss this detail. Are UBER and LYFT doing enough to vet the drivers so many Americans rely upon when they tap their app?
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ISIS affiliates are engaging in terror tactics around the globe, the latest happening just two days ago right here in NYC. Laura Loomer is getting in the faces of those who would dismiss this detail. Are UBER and LYFT doing enough to vet the drivers so many Americans rely upon when they tap their app?
Become a sponsor of Crowdsource the Truth and support the effort
http://paypal.me/crowdsourcethetruth
https://www.patreon.com/crowdsourcethetruth
PublicBitcoin Payment Address
14y2bEJ484DTbQwthX51VWpcRtk9Q7kmQQ
Public Lite Coin Payment Address LVP2d143QjPv1JaJpqgPHzQzv2qSQCDnbd
Public Monero Payment Address
43wUVqtP6gZAUow6DKgQxzCCcKtRpjinV4fKvGmLCpLC6wst4KkYudsN9T3PosWjz3b5ADQU2RWAHSKMrzyLJdpg6V2AVb4
or email truth@crowdsourcethetruth.org for a secure Bitcoin sponsorship link
Buy Crowdsource the Truth merchandise in the on-line store
https://www.redbubble.com/people/csthetruth/shop?utm_medium=email&utm_source=mkgem&utm_campaign=&asc=u
**LegalDisclaimer: Sponsorship of Crowdsource the Truth is made at the sponsor’s sole discretion. Sponsorship funds are not tax-deductible, are non-refundable, and do not represent any ownership, equity interest or decision-making authority in the organization.

The ‘Mandela Effect’ is a label which has been given to unexplained extraordinary events which have been happening worldwide. It is undeniable that these change...

The ‘Mandela Effect’ is a label which has been given to unexplained extraordinary events which have been happening worldwide. It is undeniable that these changes and events are occurring as reported.
On a daily basis we record portions of our earth as it is so we have documented evidence as we watch new islands form and new land bridges be installed.
The creator of our world is the one behind the Mandela Effect. This is not a guess or a theory... it is a fact. We hope to be able to prove this to you. The truth really is, sometimes, stranger than fiction.
http://mandelaeffect.site
http://blog.mandelaeffect.site
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXWOsL9uDdtM8xWsGZAMOrg
To request video coverage of your local area, or any area of interest to you http://blog.mandelaeffect.site/forumdisplay.php?fid=35

The ‘Mandela Effect’ is a label which has been given to unexplained extraordinary events which have been happening worldwide. It is undeniable that these changes and events are occurring as reported.
On a daily basis we record portions of our earth as it is so we have documented evidence as we watch new islands form and new land bridges be installed.
The creator of our world is the one behind the Mandela Effect. This is not a guess or a theory... it is a fact. We hope to be able to prove this to you. The truth really is, sometimes, stranger than fiction.
http://mandelaeffect.site
http://blog.mandelaeffect.site
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXWOsL9uDdtM8xWsGZAMOrg
To request video coverage of your local area, or any area of interest to you http://blog.mandelaeffect.site/forumdisplay.php?fid=35

LoveBears - http://goo.gl/5Ba5Fl
http://explore.org - Facebook http://goo.gl/SFRAfX - Twitter http://goo.gl/n03NNU
WatchThe CapeSouthCamera - Churchill Cam, Wapusk National Park - LIVE.
This camera is located at Cape Churchill, within Wapusk National Park
(NP) in northern Manitoba.
In Wapusk NP, Parks Canada protects one of the world's largest concentrations of polar bear maternity dens (where female bears give birth).
Polar bears congregate in October and November at Cape Churchill, along the Hudson Bay coast, waiting for the sea ice to form. The bears depend on the sea ice as a platform from which to hunt ringed seals, their main food source.
http://EXPLORE.org is the largest live nature cam network on the planet. We bring nature to you, raw, unscripted, and unedited. Enjoy the natural world as it unfolds in real time in front of our cameras. EXPLORE.org takes you to the most remote places around the globe, from the plains of Kenya, Africa to the riverbanks of Katmai, Alaska. Be sure to check out all the EXPLORE.org live cam channels.
Visit the full multicam experience: http://explore.org
Be sure to visit and subscribe to all your favorite EXPLORE live-cam channels.
ExploreMain Channel http://goo.gl/9L2vjH
Explore Africa http://goo.gl/8GXlAz
Explore Bears http://goo.gl/bKBhR8
Explore BirdsBats Bees https://goo.gl/chM5Zp
Explore CatsLionsTigers https://goo.gl/AQd7Zf
Explore Dog Bless You http://goo.gl/F01N6i
Explore FarmLife https://goo.gl/E2KcZQ
Explore Oceans http://goo.gl/6lKaus
Explore Sunsets http://goo.gl/zfG1DI
Explore Zen Dens http://goo.gl/Id1WMF

LoveBears - http://goo.gl/5Ba5Fl
http://explore.org - Facebook http://goo.gl/SFRAfX - Twitter http://goo.gl/n03NNU
WatchThe CapeSouthCamera - Churchill Cam, Wapusk National Park - LIVE.
This camera is located at Cape Churchill, within Wapusk National Park
(NP) in northern Manitoba.
In Wapusk NP, Parks Canada protects one of the world's largest concentrations of polar bear maternity dens (where female bears give birth).
Polar bears congregate in October and November at Cape Churchill, along the Hudson Bay coast, waiting for the sea ice to form. The bears depend on the sea ice as a platform from which to hunt ringed seals, their main food source.
http://EXPLORE.org is the largest live nature cam network on the planet. We bring nature to you, raw, unscripted, and unedited. Enjoy the natural world as it unfolds in real time in front of our cameras. EXPLORE.org takes you to the most remote places around the globe, from the plains of Kenya, Africa to the riverbanks of Katmai, Alaska. Be sure to check out all the EXPLORE.org live cam channels.
Visit the full multicam experience: http://explore.org
Be sure to visit and subscribe to all your favorite EXPLORE live-cam channels.
ExploreMain Channel http://goo.gl/9L2vjH
Explore Africa http://goo.gl/8GXlAz
Explore Bears http://goo.gl/bKBhR8
Explore BirdsBats Bees https://goo.gl/chM5Zp
Explore CatsLionsTigers https://goo.gl/AQd7Zf
Explore Dog Bless You http://goo.gl/F01N6i
Explore FarmLife https://goo.gl/E2KcZQ
Explore Oceans http://goo.gl/6lKaus
Explore Sunsets http://goo.gl/zfG1DI
Explore Zen Dens http://goo.gl/Id1WMF

42nd AnnualTournament
July 15th – 22nd, 2017
For over 40 years teams have traveled from across North America and from all corners of the globe to participate in the world's premier SeniorHockey Tournament. Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament is a week-long celebration of sportsmanship, camaraderie and seriously competitive hockey.
You'll love this tournament for the great friends you make, but you'll keep coming back because this tournament has it all!

42nd AnnualTournament
July 15th – 22nd, 2017
For over 40 years teams have traveled from across North America and from all corners of the globe to participate in the world's premier SeniorHockey Tournament. Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament is a week-long celebration of sportsmanship, camaraderie and seriously competitive hockey.
You'll love this tournament for the great friends you make, but you'll keep coming back because this tournament has it all!

Mum, Heroin and Me (Addiction Documentary) - Real Stories

Hannah is 20 and a heroin addict. She is blonde and beautiful and comes from a good family, who care about her. This documentary follows Hannah and her families...

Hannah is 20 and a heroin addict. She is blonde and beautiful and comes from a good family, who care about her. This documentary follows Hannah and her families ongoing battle with addiction.
Want to watch more full-length Documentaries?
Click here: http://bit.ly/1GOzpIu
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Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/RealStoriesChannel
Instagram - @realstoriesdocs
Content licensed from ITVGlobal. Any queries, please contact us at: realstories@littledotstudios.com
Produced by ITV Studios

Hannah is 20 and a heroin addict. She is blonde and beautiful and comes from a good family, who care about her. This documentary follows Hannah and her families ongoing battle with addiction.
Want to watch more full-length Documentaries?
Click here: http://bit.ly/1GOzpIu
Follow us on Twitter for more - https://twitter.com/realstoriesdocs
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/RealStoriesChannel
Instagram - @realstoriesdocs
Content licensed from ITVGlobal. Any queries, please contact us at: realstories@littledotstudios.com
Produced by ITV Studios